03-10-2015, 12:48 AM | #51 | ||
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Join Date: Jul 2001
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I haven't proofread this yet, this takes a long time to organize and write (especially tonight with lots of little topics), I still like doing it, but I'll have to come back and edit/fix all my typos tomorrow.
Also, I use Notepad++ to write this, and somehow I have the British version(or Canadian). I'm gonna have to figure that out. The spell check wants to replace "practicing" with "practising", and thinks I should add superfluous U's to many words like color. This leads to me doing no proofreading in Notepad++, at least until I can teach it to speak 'Murican. Last edited by Radii : 03-10-2015 at 10:22 PM. |
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03-11-2015, 11:49 PM | #52 |
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Join Date: Jul 2001
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I didn't do anything at all on Tuesday. First day I've just totally skipped. Whoops!
Week 3 Wednesday Homework Walking/Sitting Meditation - This walking thing continues to feel really weird. Walking slowly/deliberately also feels mechanically strange. I mostly notice that when I do it today. I split my 15 minutes of time between them here. I also notice, not surprsingly, that its harder to guide myself back to my focus when I notice distractions/thoughts popping around. Breathing Space - I do this twice today, I note that a lot of the "expanding" process (start to expand your focus away from your breath to notice your posture/any discomfort/expressions, etc) lead me directly to the most common thoughts I have coming and going during most of these practices already (noticing posture/physical discomfort). Thoughts as Thoughts - I look for this kind of thing, very easy to spot. Awareness of Pleasant Events - Weather was super nice today and it looks like winter is finally over here (fingers crossed), so I pulled out some shorts that I was wearing last summer. I was pleased to see that they barely fit me, a nice reminder of the progress I've made and some nice motivation to finish off my weight loss efforts, as I still have a little bit to go. One of the questions on this part that we're supposed to answer is "What did your body feel during the experience". I don't have an answer for that. Its not the type of thing I would usually notice. I will see if I can manage to pay special attention to that tomorrow. Last edited by Radii : 03-11-2015 at 11:50 PM. |
03-13-2015, 12:54 AM | #53 |
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Join Date: Jul 2001
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Week 3 Thursday Homework
Walking Meditation - I went for a walk after I was done working for the day and decided to spend the first 15 minutes of it moving more slowly and seeing what it would feel like to try to be more aware outside. Not the painfully slow deliberation that we initially learned, but a more measured pace than what I would normally do. I found I was less distracted by my own discomfort (maybe because its less awkward to be moving a little faster, or maybe just because outside there's so much more stimuli so I'm less focused, unsure). Normally, if I take a long walk without bringing my music along, I definitely get caught up with my own thoughts, only noticing enough around me to make sure I don't run over anyone or trip over the old and uneven sidewalks around here(and I'm still prone to do that on occasion anyway). Here I did find myself less caught up in my own head and a bit more aware of other stuff around me, even after I was done with the meditation part and picked up the pace to get my heart rating moving at least a little. Breathing Space - I did this 3 times today like I'm supposed to. This task has 3 steps. 1 - take a good posture. 2 - focus on breathing. 3 - Expand awareness past breathing to the rest of your body and then the stuff around you. I find that I don't really "know" when to move from step 2 to 3. I'm just doing it, so its fine, but I wonder if I'm looking for a sense of calmness or whatever with the breathing before I move on. Maybe the fact that I'm thinking about this means its awkward. Dunno. Maybe something to mention in class. Awareness of Pleasant Events - Yesterday my "pleasant event" was kind of a big one, but a lot of the examples of this kind of thing that we talked about in class were very small, the idea to be that its easy to remember tiny negative things but finding and remembering enough positive things to cancel out the negatives takes active effort. Today I focus on the weather while I'm taking my walk. There's a nice cool breeze and it feels really good after all these days over the past month where it was so cold (relatively for the south at least). Body Scan - Optional this week, I did it tonight. I have to be at the dentist at 8am for my crown and maybe root canal. I figured doing this before bed might give me something else to focus on and maybe make it a little easier to fall asleep since I'm really not looking forward to the morning. The "thoughts as thoughts" thing isn't really something that seems easy to write about, but I'm doing it. The other thing I'm doing is revisiting mindful eating a little. The instructor on Monday talking about how frequently people's perceptions of what activities from class they like/dislike change over the course of the class got me curious. I'm not going all out with it, but I'm trying to pick spots to eat a little slower, to enjoy the things I like more, to not put myself in spots where I feel like I need to scarf down my meal so fast to get back to work. I eat bacon every day, I fucking love bacon, but a lot of times I just down it as quick as I can while I read my work e-mails and figure out what I'm going to be doing for the day. For now, I'm making an effort to enjoy it a little more. |
03-14-2015, 01:24 AM | #54 |
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Join Date: Jul 2001
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Week 3 Friday Homework
Sitting Meditation - Did a full 15 minutes sitting today. That's the longest that I've done this at one time. About halfway in my back got a little sore and I relaxed my posture just a little, but still kept it pretty good. This felt pretty good today, I noticed the thoughts as always, but nothing came up that was hard to deal with or hard to "acknowledge and watch it go by". I got a song stuck in my head, that was odd in this kind of setting. I did come completely out of this process twice during the 15 minutes, once to check my clock when I noted that my posture needed adjusting, and once to look to see if I had fed my cat when he made some noise. Both times I got back to the breathing immediately. Breathing Space - I did this three times today, including once at the dentist office this morning in the waiting room. I had a temporary crown put in today. I will say that I was very nervous while driving over but that doing this in the waiting room definitely calmed the anxiety about the appointment (or distracted me, whatever it was it helped). Awareness of Pleasant Events - Today's pleasant event was a huge comeback victory in a League of Legends ranked game. I'm competitive as hell and this is my main hobby right now. 100% expected to lose this game for the first 30 minutes or so, a couple good teamfights turned it around, we won, everyone was shocked. I felt energized and excited, like most of us would experiencing a comeback win in any sort of competitive thing, sport/game/whatever. Whee. I actually went to the dentist twice today. The temporary crown popped off the first time I tried to eat, even though I was trying to mainly eat on the other side of my mouth. It was 5:30, they were closing up shop for the weekend but I called them just in time, and live close enough to the office, that they were willing to wait for me to run up there. Whew. If I had called 5 minutes later and they'd been closed and I was trying to figure out what to do w/ my exposed tooth, imagine how differently I would have viewed everything that I did today. Last edited by Radii : 03-15-2015 at 12:29 AM. |
03-15-2015, 12:29 AM | #55 |
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Week 3 Saturday Homework
Walking Meditation - did this for the full 15 minutes today, inside. Easy to do for the full duration this time, though I continue to find myself more easily distracted during this than the sitting thing. Not being able to do it with your eyes closed makes it harder in that regard. A couple thoughts kept coming around and I was having a lot of trouble letting them go. That's not so unusual, but my reaction was. I noted that I was shaking my head at myself and getting actively frustrated that I was "doing it right" or whatever. That is the first time I've felt that kind of issue with the "acceptance" of thoughts pillar and the "patience" one in that manner. Breathing Space - Did this three times today, I like it, even though it doesn't feel like a completely natural process. But the idea that I can do this a few times during the day and say "oh yeah, lets just slow everything down for a few minutes, then get back to it", feels pretty nice. Awareness of Pleasant Events - I didn't actually do this today. That doesn't mean I can't remember anything pleasant during my day. I can remember many things. It was a fine day, really. But there was no time during the day where I noted a positive thing and chose to spend a little extra time focusing on it/experiencing it. That's an autopilot thing. Its harder to do in a moment than it sounds. |
03-16-2015, 12:12 AM | #56 |
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Join Date: Jul 2001
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Week 3 Sunday Homework
Mindfulness Meditation - Did this for 15 minutes tonight. This is one of those nights where I have had one specific thing on my mind most of the day when I haven't been on autopilot or distracted, so its no suprise when my thoughts land on the same thing when I try to calm down and focus on my breathing for 15 minutes. I would say my ability to let my thoughts pass by is "mixed" tonight. Actually, maybe not, maybe its better than that. Its a set of thoughts that, if they occur outside of this meditation process, I'm going to sit on them hard and dwell a bit, or reach for a distraction. So of course in this practice I'm not going to be able to just easily let them go. But I did, each time they came up, let them go after a moment or two. So fuck it, maybe I should be proud of that instead of saying "well that's not ideal". Breathing Space - Did this 4 or 5 times today, I spent a lot of the day gaming and chatting with friends over voice chat, and frequently between games I would get up and walk around for a couple minutes, then do this when I sat back down. Awareness of Pleasant Events - Much like my week 1 "routine event", I took some extra time to notice my enjoyment of giving my cat attention. |
03-16-2015, 12:27 AM | #57 |
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Week 3 Review
-- We got another survey to do this week, much of it is the same as it was after week 1, do a body scan or breathing practice of some sort for at least 15 minutes, then take the survey. The questions were mostly about my judgement of how I viewed my experiences during the practice. Could I separate myself from my thoughts, was I curious about what my experience would be, was I curious about what I would learn about myself doing the activity, was I able to let thoughts go by without judging positive or negatively, etc. Following that were questions about how I treat myself and view failure. Am I hard on myself when I fail, etc. I think my answers about the practice/experience itself were stronger/more affirming as I've gotten more used to doing things. My answers about how I view my failures felt unchanged. I'm damn hard on myself if I view the results of what I'm doing as not perfect, nothing from this class has changed that. Walking Meditation - So I did this a number of times during the week, and it always felt like a strange thing to do. Much more "difficult" than the other things we've done, distractions when you're moving and your eyes are open are much easier to latch on to. Breathing Space - I like this process, I like the idea of, a few times a day, just taking a short break to reset things. The "steps" to this still feel very mechanical, but overall I like it. Awareness of Pleasant Events - This has been a good lesson on autopilot, and how very easy it is to lock in on even tiny negative feelings and forget positive feelings. I haven't had any "bad days" this week, even the day I had that big dental work was ok enough, but man over the course of the week its so much easier to remember little nagging things than to remember all the little moments that were just fine, or where something enjoyable was happening. Thoughts as Thoughts - I stopped writing about this, to recap its the act or recognizing that many of our thoughts and judgements are not actual facts, that we frequently think about things where we're filling in holes, wondering what someone else thinks, for example. We still haven't really been told what to do with this knowledge, but its really obvious when its there. Looking back on things from past weeks, I continued to implement mindful eating at least in small ways during the week. For foods that I really like, my bacon and eggs, the trips to Chipotle when I'm out in Raleigh (the stuff we made at home this week was pretty boring so examples are limited for the week), I am making an active effort to enjoy those foods more instead of just wolfing everything down so I can get on with my day. I also did the body scan a few times this week even though it was optional. Hooray. One thing I will point out, and hope we talk about in class even if I have to be the one to bring it up, is that the new things from this week, the walking meditation and the breathing space exercise, felt much more like very mechanical processes where I might wonder if I'm "doing it right" or if I'm just vaguely going through a motion that sort of looks like what the instructors are suggesting we do. With the practices from earlier weeks its much more clear. On to week 4 tomorrow night after work! |
03-17-2015, 12:30 AM | #58 |
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Late night tonight, and the class writeups take awhile, I will work on it tomorrow when I'm looking for distractions
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03-17-2015, 09:21 PM | #59 |
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Monday, March 16 - Week 4 Class
Walking Meditation So there was an old dude in a wheelchair there when we got there. Our class is basically in the waiting room of a physical therapy/rehab center that closes a little before we start. The instructor is chatting with him before class starts. Dude is 73 and in a wheelchair, his kid coming to pick him up is stuck in traffic. So class starts and instructor tells us that we're going to begin by practicing our walking meditation that we learned from last week. So we all get up and find spots around where we can spread out. So let me see if I can adequately describe this scene. There are about 20 of us, spread out throughout the giant waiting area of this place. The goal of walking meditation is to walk extremely slowly, "as slow as possible while still able to maintain balance", to allow ourselves to become aware (be mindful) of everything that happens while we are walking, the shifting of weight, the way it feels as we take each step, the feeling of our balance, anything we may notice about the basic process of walking. So we all start doing this, and all of a sudden there are 20 seemingly regular people creeping across the room back and forth while an unbelievably confused 70 year old wheelchair bound dude watches. I have NO IDEA what he must have been thinking. I'm kind of embarrassed during this. Also, a lot embarrassed. Walking meditation feels silly when I do it by myself in my house. It feels silly to describe to whoever is here reading this. I'm barely comfortable doing this with a group of people who have paid for this and have bought into everything we're doing. Once I start doing it along w/ everyone else the embarrassment mostly goes away, but I find the situation entirely hilarious. I really want to see what he's watching/doing during this, but I also really don't' want to make eye contact with him because the feeling of embarrassment will come back. So we do this for awhile. I remain almost entirely distracted, but do "accomplish" some things during this. The new tips given by the instructor help. I'm not sure if he explained it differently than the lady last week, but I feel like I have a little better understanding of it here. I am more aware of my pace and my balance. I'm more aware of what steps hurt my knee and what steps don't... not in a "focusing on pain" way, but in a "paying attention to my mechanics" way. Eventually we all go sit back down. The discussion after didn't happen until a bit later but I'll include it here: -- The instructor better explains the point of what we're doing. Unlike the chick last week, he actually shows us an example of how to do this. He walks across the room at a normal pace and explains that the body is naturally making a good number of movements and adjustments and its impossible to be aware of it all. So we learn at a snail's pace, trying to notice everything that's happening while going as slowly as possible. He takes a couple steps at a very slow pace, saying out loud everything he notices, "I take my first step with my right food, I notice my balance shifting, I notice which part of my foot hits the ground, I notice the length of my stride, I'm a tall guy, is it a short stride or a long one?" etc. Like other things we're learning (Breathing Space) its mentioned that we're beginners, and must go slowly, but with practice, we could become capable of being truly mindful of the process of walking at a more normal (aka less silly to me) pace. Lastly, back to the sciency stuff that I do like, the instructor mentions that the act of simply slowing down in this manner is one way to engage the parasympathetic nervous system to help lessen the impact of all of the little stress responses that most everyone experiences all the time. Now, I still don't really "get it" entirely. There is a mind-body connection being made, and a general focus on body awareness, which is something I struggle with (more on this later), which may be why I don't like this. But I still think I mainly don't like it because I feel silly. But anyway, the point being that this description from this instructor helps give me a focus on what I maybe could be looking for when I do this in the future. -- Also, while I will happily say that I don't like this practice, and find it silly, I also recognize that - like with mindful eating - the fact that I don't like this one very probably means I could benefit more from sticking with it. I don't like it in part because I don't take well to it, because the focus is on body awareness, which is something that frustrates me, which means I could practice this more to see if this is a skill I can develop. |
03-17-2015, 09:26 PM | #60 |
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Poem
Today's poem is Enough by David Whyte. Discussion of last week's class/Questions The instructor asks us what we did last week, everyone got shy all of a sudden and he had to prod a little to get answers. We talked about everything from last week and he expanded on some topics in interesting ways: Thoughts as Thoughts - We talk about the initial example of this topic... we are walking down the street and see someone we know. We smile and wave at them, they do not acknowledge us and walk by. What is your response to this? Many people had emotional responses to this, deciding what we thought the other person was thinking or what they felt about us to allow them to ignore us in this way. The instructor explains that this is a natural function of the brain. We can't stop it from happening. We have incomplete information all the time, in all kinds of situations, and we fill in things as best we can. He describes it as the brain "telling a story, often unconsciously" and that a point of discussing it and thinking about it as a part of mindfulness is that, by simply being aware that this is something that happens, we give ourselves the option to recognize that the unconscious story that we tell to fill in incomplete information doesn't necessarily have to be what's actually happening, and that we can be open to other options. Breathing Space - We go over this again as well, and there are some questions, so the instructor explains this. This is a concept I feel like I got pretty well, but I'm always happy to have a second explanation of a topic since its possible for other details/suggestions to come up. The instructor walks through the process verbally, and I find it useful: Step 1: Pause - What's happening around me? What am I feeling right now? Lets pause, recognize what's going on, and take a good posture (example in class as the sun was setting: "the sun is really in my eyes right now, that's pretty annoying. I look to my right and I can't see any of you, only shadows") Step 2: Breathing - Draw your attention to your breath. We all know how to do this by now. One mention that's slightly new and maybe interesting: "Wherever you feel your breath. Are you breathing into your diaphragm and feeling it there? Your chest? Do you notice your nostrils instead? Whatever you notice most when breathing" That 3rd one never occurred to me. Doesn't really matter, but I like hearing these kinds of things for some reason. Step 3: Expand - This is where many of the questions came from. Instructor: "I start from wherever I notice my breath, and move outward. I notice my chest, now I feel my shoulders, I notice my face is relaxed and comfortable, I notice that my knee is hurting a little, I notice the people sitting closest to me, now I notice those a little further away, now I'm back, and interacting with the world again" Its discussed that, like many other things we're learning in recent weeks, this begins as a slow process (he said 30s to 2 minutes), but with a great deal of practice becomes one that takes seconds. A question is asked about using this to "fix" problems, I can't remember the exact question or phrasing, something about the idea of using it to remove a moment of frustration. Like with many things here, the instructor mentions that there isn't necessarily a specific goal in that manner, but that with practice that kind of thing may happen. He offers a suggestion to "note what you're feeling when you pause (step 1). After relaxing, breathing, then opening back up to things, you may begin to notice that your view of your problem/situation/frustration has changed." There's an abstract quality to these kinds of answers, no guarantee of anything, but the overreaching idea that, with practice, you'll start to find that there's all kinds of things you can do with these practices. I might have been uncomfortable with that kind of answer a month ago. Here I find myself nodding. Very possibly because this Breathing Space practice is one I took to quickly. I like doing it. It feels like a momentary break, and that feels good. It also feels like a direct extension/comparison to concepts I've learned in physical therapy, so it feels like its reinforcing other good habits. Maybe if I didn't feel that way I'd think differently about these abstract types of answers. Awareness of Pleasant Events - We review this as well. Lots of comments about how this was harder to do than expected. One comment that resonated the most with me was the idea that it was easy to reflect on a pleasant moment soon after it was over, but harder to recognize "in the moment" and to think about it that way. One of the guys who seems really experienced with this stuff already talks about noticing birds/trees, very simple pleasant things, when stuck in traffic on I-40. -- We talk a little more vague science. The idea that evolution has led to a heavier focus on negative events. A negative event might harm you, or kill you. A positive event isn't going to bring you nirvana, it doesn't require the focus of the unconscious brain, its not a threat. A study is mentioned (not by name or any sort of lookup reference) that to have the best mental health possible, your positive experiences should outweigh your negative ones. So your brain points out, finds, and focuses on unpleasant things whether you want it to or not, doesn't really care about pleasant things, so you're really at a deficit if you're trying to find and notice more good things than bad in your life. Interesting'ish. -- Another concept here is the concept of being able to notice two things at once. Your knee hurts, but only a little, is it going to be a nagging pain that you allow to drag you down completely? Or can you acknowledge that you've got some pain, but also at the same time find something good that's going on. You aren't shoving the pain away or ignoring it. You're just trying to balance it out with a positive to stay neutral. He specifically talks about knee pain here, usually its back, where I don't really have an issue (which, as a side note, I find it interesting to even type that. My upper back is sore all the time. But I know why, its from my posture work, so its not even a problem to me. My knee does hurt more than my upper back, but what matters is that I don't know why, and don't know what to do to fix it. So I notice it WAY MORE.) |
03-17-2015, 09:29 PM | #61 |
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Yoga/Stretching
Just like calling mindfulness meditation "Sitting Practice", the instructor introduces us to yoga with the phrase "Gentle Stretching". He asks how many of us have done yoga before. I believe only 2 of the ~20 of us didn't raise a hand. I have literally no experience with yoga other than a curiosity about it, so I'm not quite sure how to describe what we did or compare it to anything. We went through some stretches and a few poses over what was probably a 25-30 minute process. A few key things were mentioned at the start: 1) Always be aware of your breathing, specifically, that you aren't holding your breath. 2) GENTLE stretching. Some of these things will over time improve strength and flexibility if you do it regularly, but the goal is not to push yourself. 3) Try to keep a constant awareness on how your body feels. What areas are tense? 4) Move slowly. Maintain an awareness of all your movement. It wasn't discussed until later, but there is also a point that seems incredibly critical to me that is raised at some point during this: PROGRESS So lets take this time during the Yoga explanation to talk about one of the things that I think I'm starting to see a change in. Why integrate some yoga into mindfulness practice? 1) There are some people who have nearly completely disconnected from their bodies, who have no awareness of what their bodies are feeling at any given time. This is one of the best ways to begin to try to develop this awareness. It can sort of act as biofeedback for body awareness. So this is a huge deal for me. I've mentioned before the idea that I feel at least somewhat physically uncomfortable at nearly all times. I've also mentioned having a very hard time describing how I feel physically outside of "noticing symptoms". The example that is easiest to explain comes from physical therapy, I've stated this before but I write a lot, its worth saying again. My therapist has me do a couple tests for stability/flexibility. She then works on me in some fashion for most of an hour. She then has me re-do the tests for stability/flexibility. She will ask me "how do you feel? Do you feel any different?" I can't answer. Later on in PT we worked on this, and she helped me a lot. So anyway, these mentions both with walking meditation, and with Yoga (and with the initial body scan) of body awareness seem important to me. And it DOES seem like something that is improving, in some small ways. Its taken Physical Therapy, Massage Therapy, and Mindfulness, all three, but I am seeing a change. PT helped me identify all kinds of problems that I had, and has gotten me on the road to fixing them. Regular Deep Tissue Massages (also "prescribed" by PT) have helped loosen things up, but I've also found that I can use the massages to help me recognize things. When I go in for a massage on my back, the guy can tell me what areas are tighter than others. I cannot yet feel this, but no surprise, its always the same muscles. So even though I can't tell what's tight, and what's not, I can use that feedback to start to try to look for times to relax those areas. I've been able to notice times when my shoulders naturally tighten up that I've never noticed before. Not enough to learn how to carry a more naturally relaxed posture, but, its a start. This Yoga practice feels like another step to that process, with an active focus to look for tension, to find times to relax, to steady breathing. Back to Yoga We start with some stretches, if they are "poses" I don't know what they're called: -- lie on back, press small of back into the ground, relax, repeat a few times. -- pull one knee up to the chest, hold it, then the other, then both. If able to, raise the head while holding the knees up. -- pull one knee up, this time extend the leg straight up into the air. Then do the other leg, then both. -- lie on side comfortably (using hands to prop up head/balance). Pull leg up to chest, then push it back down so that its straight. Stretch foot out while doing this. Lie on other side/do same with other leg. -- Now some actual poses that have names. Table (on all fours), alternate cat/cow poses. -- Sit up on heels, into child's pose. -- Lie on stomach, cobra pose (tense legs/glutes, lift head/upper body up) -- Work towards boat pose (start lying on back, raise legs, raise upper body, balancing on hips). This one is a killer for my core. Most things felt easy/"gentle". The final movement is great for my core and not gentle at all even in a very basic attempt. Also when I pull my left knee up to my chest and then try to stretch my leg straight up, I can't do it, my knee feels an immense amount of pressure at about the halfway point of that extension. If I use my other leg to help push just a little though its fine. So that's my introduction to yoga. I have other stretching routines I've worked on at times, and a specific stretching routine from physical therapy that I asked them to help me with. I'm clearly interested in (and have been, slowly) improving my flexibility. Point being, this will clearly be something I like doing as well. |
03-17-2015, 09:37 PM | #62 |
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Homework
-- Alternate Mindful Walking and Mindfulness Meditation for at least 15 minutes a day, body scan optional. -- Breathing Space - Do this 3 times a day. -- Mindful Yoga - Include into your routine, either by doing the full routine from class or doing some stretches before/after other meditation practices. Some open endedness here depending on time constraints. -- Unpleasant Events - Hooray. Last week we attempted to take time out of our day to notice pleasant events. Today we will do the same with unpleasant events. Day of Mindfulness This comes up again. Its happening on March 28th, that's only two weekends away. Thank god its not happening this weekend. 6 hours w/ this class and the one that meets Tuesday night, where we will practice all of the different things we've learned here, and a few things we haven't learned yet. My response to this coming up is mostly abject terror. -- There is a lot of additional reading for this week in the binder/PDF that we received. I haven't read it all yet, I may comment more/clarify things once I do. Most week's I find that the extra reading does help clarify ideas in some way. |
03-18-2015, 12:26 AM | #63 |
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Week 4 Tuesday Homework
Mindfulness Meditation - I've got a stressful thing stuck in my head, and I know its not going anywhere during this. But I'm able to sit for 15 minutes, allowing the thoughts about my stress to come, and for the most part am ok with it. The physical response to the stress stays (this is a serious, legit stress, not some worry about a task at work or some shit, but a heart rate up/chest feeling tight stress), but I find that allowing myself to go for just a little while without allowing my thoughts to race from one thing to another with tons of judgement is calming. I'm not stress free after 15 minutes, but I found that I got 15 minutes of calm where I otherwise wouldn't have. This feels like progress. Breathing Space - Did this 3 times today. Mindful Yoga - I did the full routine as we learned in class, in place of where I would have normally done my stretches that PT is having me do, I clocked it and took 17 minutes. I think it could probably take a bit longer if I'm really taking my time with some of the movements, but after the fact I'm pleased to see that I didn't rush through everything as quick as possible. Unpleasant Event - Yeah this is gonna be way easier than finding pleasant events. Damn you brain. |
03-19-2015, 12:19 PM | #64 |
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Week 4 Wednesday
Ending Physical Therapy I've mentioned physical therapy so much in this thread, and in other threads on FOFC (Weight loss/strava mostly) that it seems worth a mention. As of yesterday I am done with my pelvic floor physical therapy. I went for about 5 months. It was the best experience I've had with anything involving medicine in my life. The improvements I've made in the last 5 months feel like they are just as important to my quality of life as the 110 pounds I've lost from my heighest weight. And there is still more improvement to come, we've just reached a point where I no longer need regular check-ins at PT to continue to make them. Before PT, i was taking 3 meds from urologist, now I'm off of two of them and on a half dose of the 3rd, with an eye to get fully off it very soon, with zero increase in symptoms. I honestly thought I had IBS, or some kind of serious digestive issue. I did not. Without getting too TMI, my "bathroom trips" are now 100% normal almost all of the time. I was having a pain during... "sexual activity" ... that is the worst pain i've ever felt in my life, an absolute 10 on a scale of 1-10, it happened every tme without fail. Its now a 4, sometimes a 1 or a 2. Outside of recognizing pain I had almost no awareness of anything happening in my body. With the help of the therapist that was working with my foot problem and some general flexibility (because everything is connected), I'm starting to develop that for the first time in my life. I can maintain near perfect posture for these meditation exercises for 15 minutes comfortably. I didn't even know I cared about that, now I find it amazing. Most importantly, before PT I saw myself going to my urologist for slowly escalating problems every few months, without a diagnosis, with no hope at all of "curing" anything, just praying that there is a medicine to make this suck less. I would think to myself "will this ever stop? What happens if 10 years from now this is still escalting regularly like this? Will I want to continue to live at that point?" Now, all of those fears are gone, I have the full belief that all of my issues are fixable, or at least realistically managable. I feel like a completely different person than I did 5 months ago, and these kinds of sweeping changes were not my goal when i started this, but that's what it became. Full disclosure: I shared this link with both of my physical therapists and both are reading. At my visit yesterday I only said good bye to one of them, and I did share with her this appreciation for everything they've done for me. But I didn't say good bye to the other face to face, and I'm hoping she is paying close attention to this section when she gets here Homework Mindfulness Meditation - I need to do the walking thing some, but decided to make it two days in a row of the sitting meditation. I only did this for 10 minutes. The above section on ending PT should make it clear that i was definitely having some strong feelings yesterday. There were some other things I chose not to write about that added to it quite a bit. So this practice today brought about a lot of extremely strong emotional responses as I let go of my distractions. I let them come, but 10 minutes of it was enough for today. Breathing Space - Did this 3 times, including once in the waiting room before my appointment. I am, to this point, not noticing my experience with this "changing" in a way worth noting. So I'll point out that I still enjoy this more than any other practice we've done, it gives me something productive to do when I'm killing time in a waiting room, it gives me something to do to "take a break" if I've been at the computer working or gaming too long, its a really nice brief reset almost every time. Mindful Yoga - Did this again in full, about an hour before going to the gym. So I still have this knee thing. I'm seeing an orthopedist today. Its very possible that I'll be out of one physical therapy process and into another nearly immediately. But the problems and work invovled in the pelvic floor physical therapy were very deep, intense, long term problems in my life. This knee thing hasn't been around that long and I'm 100% convinced its going to be something we're going to fix. Don't expect this kind of crazed emotional response to whatever is next Last edited by Radii : 03-19-2015 at 01:35 PM. |
03-20-2015, 12:23 AM | #65 | |
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Quote:
And by nearly immediately I mean absoultely immediately. Ortho says mild arthritis in my left knee but that all the weight I've lost will do wonders for keeping it "mild". The other diagnosis is quad tendonitis. I got a couple names of recommended Ortho PT specialists from my pelvic floor therapist yesterday, called one of them, and I start PT for my knee tomorrow. So off we go. Week 4 Thursday Homework Sitting Meditation - Did this, basically, in the ortho waiting room. My wait was over a half hour, and I spent most of my time sitting in my fully upright posture focusing on my breathing no matter what was going on around me. Distractions pulled me completely out of it a couple times, but I would reset myself and get back to it. In these situations in a public place, I find that conversations around me mostly just come and go the same way thoughts do. This is actually nice. I'm the guy that locks on to conversations around me whether I want to or not at times, especially when bored. So its actually cool to notice the difference when I'm doing this. The times in public areas where I've found this impossible has been with loud TV's or loud music. The people, I can ignore them just fine for a little while. Breathing Space - Did this 3 times today. Awareness of pleasant thoughts - That's right, fuck the police. Homework says unpleasant, but today we're doing pleasant! I went to see Sarah McLachlan in concert tonight. She does a thing where she brings some people on stage for a couple songs. A 7 year old kid and her mom end up talking to her on stage, its the 7 year old's first concert (Sarah: "Well thank you so much for picking me and not Taylor Swift" A+). A minute later, the kid asks "Will you play Blackbird?" She says she's not sure she knows it, guitarist and her literally fumble over it for a minute finding the right key, pretty sure she got some of the words wrong, but how can you say no in that situation I guess So ya, watching that all unfold is pretty much pure, unadulterated sweetness. A very easy moment to "savor" and bring mindful awareness too. Last edited by Radii : 03-20-2015 at 08:35 AM. |
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03-21-2015, 12:25 AM | #66 |
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Week 4 Friday Homework
Walking Meditation - I need to be doing this one more often, but earlier in the week simply didn't feel like I'd accomplish anything. I was *extremely* distracted by some things and felt that I'd get more out of the thing I'm "good" at. Decided to do this weird walking thing today. I attempted to focus mainly on my feet, on walking mechanics, with a bit more of an "aim" towards body awareness than I might have had before. I noticed that when walking slowly and going for good posture I have a tendency to just tense up my entire upper body (tighten all the things to hold that good posture). That's not good, relax more. Was I doing that before, do I do that normally? Hm. Maybe something to look for. I continue to note that it is *extremely* hard to not become massively distracted during this practice. I'm trying to focus on mechanical things throughout my body, and that brings more things into my awareness, which makes it easier for all kinds of things to creep in, as opposed to the singularity of "focus on your breath", etc. Still feels weird, and feels weird to write about, but eh. Breathing Space - Only did this twice today. Mindful Stretching - I did the yoga/stretching stuff in full again today, though I must say there was nothing "mindful" about it. I went through the process and motions for all of the stretches, but my mind was off in daydream land thinking about something, and at the time I really had no desire to stop that from happening at the time. Awareness of unpleasant thoughts - Back on task after yesterday's switch to the other side of things. I'm not writing about these things because I tend to notice "bigger" things that I just do not want to share. One thing I have noticed that is worth mentioning is that even noticing "unpleasant" things is harder than I thought it would be. I mean, its easy to stop after the fact and say "oh, that thing sucked a little." But there is an intent of (to quote the instructor) "bringing intentional and focused awareness" to an event, even a very small one, and to note your experience with it. Doing that, in real time, instead of "cheating" and writing down something after the fact, is actually difficult. A lesson in auto-pilot I guess. Additionally, and I don't know if this goes back to the topic of body awareness that I have been writing about an awful lot lately, but I notice with both happy and unhappy events, it is very, very difficult for me to take note of how the thing effects me physically, which is one of the things we are tasked with doing for this thing. Unless I am elated, or deeply sad so that there is a strong physical response, I find this quite difficult. Not complaining, mind you, at this point I am completely bought in to even the super weird tasks and things going on here. When I describe something as difficult I am thinking that there is probably something I can learn there, and that maybe I can try to look at a thing, event, feeling, whatever, in a different way. Last edited by Radii : 03-21-2015 at 02:16 AM. |
03-21-2015, 01:40 AM | #67 |
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Another "step back a bit and notice a thing" comment here: I haven't gone back to re-read a lot of this in a couple weeks, but I notice myself describing tasks, practices, thoughts a little differently. Maybe I'd even say its that darn "beginners mind" pillar that I have been so stuck with. I'm not all-in on that thing yet, but I find myself being open and curious about what I might get out of different practices.
There's a subtle difference in day to day things here and there too. Definitely not "implementing" mindfulness in the exact ways that the instructor describes things happening for very experienced people, but maybe using some of the things we've talked about to find a different viewpoint on what's going on in my head, to be a little less hard on myself. Hard to describe exactly, and I will look to pull some examples here and there to write about. For now I can say I can see something happening slowly here, and it is definitely interesting and seems positive. |
03-22-2015, 01:00 AM | #68 |
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Week 4 Saturday Homework
Mindfulness Meditation - I only did this for 5 minutes today. I put off everything til the end of the day instead of making breaks for myselt throughout the day to do things. i was rushed and was struggling with some of the thoughts that seemed to want to settle in today. Decided I'm not really up for this. I am going to try to do the body scan w/ the CD in an effort to slow my mind down before bed. Breathing Space - 3x. No new comments really. Mindful Yoga/Stretching - I did a little of this, but not the full routine. Awareness of Unpleasant Event - Yup. I continue to mostly not want to discuss these. The fact that there is not much to write about today is the takeaway really. Some poor time management pushed these things off into the background. We shall try again tomorrow |
03-23-2015, 01:17 AM | #69 |
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Week 4 Sunday Homework
A little better time management today, I actually did the things. Mindfulness Meditation - I did save this until the very end of the day, but I did so intentionally, wanting to do it, take the survey, write this up, and prepare for bed. 15 minutes was no problem today, I'll note that again I chose the "sitting" meditation instead of the walking thing. I need to work on that more frequently but I feel like this isn't a good time to do so. My mind was moving pretty quickly tonight, there was really no "slowing down" during this process, but I did find I was able to just allow things to come without being too judgemental or without reacting too much, it just happened that thoughts were rolling through non stop I got a song stuck in my head at one point, that's a lot harder to "observe" and allow it through and to bring my focus back to my breathing than most things I find. Breathing Space - Only 2x today. Mindful Yoga - I did this in the morning, but again today I did it really just as a stretching process, I wanted to loosen up just a little before I did the stuff my new orthopedic PT gave me on Friday. Awareness of Unpleasant Event - Repeat of past days. Doing this, noting it, not writing about it here. |
03-23-2015, 01:47 AM | #70 |
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I took the research survey after meditating tonight, but the questions appear to be the exact same every week. I don't think there's a lot to talk about here. It may be more relevant to wait until the very end and compare the final stuff to answers I gave at the very beginning, instead of trying to look for tiny changes from week to week.
Week 4 Review Mindful Yoga - I like this. As I mentioned when I talked about the class, I am interested in improving my flexibility, and have messed around with lots of different stretching routines (though I've never really stuck with anything) over the last year. I'm also curious about yoga. Early in the week I was doing this more "completely", with an actual mindful focus, trying to pay attention to how I was feeling during each movement, etc. Later in the week I found myself using it just to stretch. Awareness of Unpleasant Events - This was the only other "new" thing this week I will say that bringing active focus and awareness to something unpleasant is easier than it is for pleasant things, but not by as much as I would have expected. By this, I'm talking about "in the moment" awareness... as something is happening that feels unpleasant (or pleasant going back to last week), trying to allow myself to focus on the experience a bit more at the time the thing is happening. Its very easy to think about something after its happened and to reflect and decide "what was I feeling when that thing happened" and to write it down, but stopping/slowing down to observe while something happens is a lot different. I'll also say that I found it easier to do with very unpleasant things. I hesitate to say that there's a "goal" of any practice, most of the time we are told to just try to do the thing and see where it leads, but I feel like a goal here is to, over time at least, train yourself to be able to be mindful of smaller things throughout the day. I found that very difficult to do, but larger events are easier to focus on and write about. But I'm not sure that's really the point. I dunno, I assume this will come up in class tomorrow. Looking at other practices that aren't new: Mindfulness Meditation - aka sitting practice or whatever. This varies heavily from time to time, which makes me like it. I find I can't predict what's going to happen either. If I'm feeling kind of crappy/stuck on some negative things when I do this, sometimes I find this practice to be very relaxing and calming. Other times I feel like all I'm doing is removing all distractions to bring an INTENSE focus to whatever negative thing I have going on. When I'm feeling neutral or in a good mood, sometimes this practice is very nice and I find the typical "mind racing" feeling I am used to slows down noticibly and its very cool to have a different experience. Other times, I find that I'm impatient, because hey, I'm in a good mood right now, who wants to waste time doing this thing, lets get back to whatever thing it is that has me in a good mood ASAP! Walking Meditation - My honest intention is to do this more. I have a strong curiousity about the concept of "body awareness" and feel like I'm learning some things about myself here. Its not something that will come quick and something that will require actual practice. But I am slowly seeing some things change. Because this isn't easy though, if I'm in a crappy mood, I want to fall back on the easier thing. That was the case many days this week. Breathing Space - This chugged along this week, it remains a neat thing to do for a "break" during the day, a small reset. But I cannot say I noticed any change or anything really worth noting whenever I did it this week. Mindful Eating - I didn't do any of this this week. I think I need a root canal on that tooth that currently has the temporary crown, I will probably find out tomorrow. I don't want to bring extra awareness to things that may remind me of this right now :P Body Scan - I didn't do this at all this week. I mentioned Saturday that I wanted to, but it didn't happen. Most days this is simply a factor of time. I like the yoga, so I was doing the full thing each day which takes about 20 minutes. I was spending 15 minutes in some sort of meditation. The breathing space takes a few minutes each time. So I would frequently decide "I've done enough today, not gonna worry about that." That is unlikely to change, so what I should probably do instead is try to mix it up more often and not stick so much to the things that I like the most. I think I've noted it before, but the things I like the most are in many cases the "easier" things for me, while the things I don't like may very well benefit me more if I would just do them, I probably don't like them because they are a challenge for me and they hit on some area where I could use improvement. There was a fair bit of reading this week that I should probably write about at some point, but not tonight. Maybe when I do the reading for next week's class I'll try to write about the things from Week 4 and Week 5 both. |
03-24-2015, 01:20 AM | #71 |
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I thought I was going to finish writing up tonight's class before bed, nope, too tired Tomorrow!
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03-24-2015, 11:43 PM | #72 |
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Monday, March 23 - Week 5 Class
Mindfulness Meditation - Added Breathing Exercises We start the class with "sitting practice". The instructor leads it and walks us through a number of techniques we can use to stay more alert and more focused that we may want to experiment with. Titled "Following Your Breath", we also get a handout listing each one: Simple Breathing - This is what we already know how to do. Just rest on your breathing, not necessarily doing anything special with it, just focus on your breathing, and when you find yourself distracted, acknowledge your thoughts and center back on your breath. Noticing Each Breath - Make a small mental note of each breath, by gently noting "in...out...in...out" on each inhale/exhale. Counting Breaths to Ten - Count each breath from 1 to 10 (inhale/exhale is one, not two). When you find your mind wandering, start over at one. Notice if you judge yourself for not counting to 10 every time. The point is not counting but maintaining focus on your breathing. Counting Breaths Backwards - Count backwards from 50 to 1. **Super Detail-Oriented Anal-Retentive me notices that the instructor in class said to count each in/out breath as one, the handout says to count in as 50, out as 49, etc, etc. WHICH IS IT, HUH?!** Obviously, it doesn't matter at all. Breathing With a Mantra - We didn't try this one in class, for obvious reasons. Select a simple one or two syllable sound which means nothing to you. Begin by softly saying this sound with every exhale, over a period of time soften your voice until you're saying it internally only. Controlled Relaxation Breathing - Breathe in long and slow through your nose, exhale through slightly pursed lips as if you were gently blowing out a candle. This may be done at any time and especially when you feel stress. My thoughts: Mantras are a bit beyond what I'm comfortable with at this point, even with all of the unusual things I've done here so far. The counting is interesting, but knowing me I do really make that into a game to see how many times I can get to 10 without having to start over and start to debate with myself "oh was that a thought, do I have to restart, shit". I'll try those anyway. The simple noting of "in/out" along with the breath sounds real appealing, adding a slight extra focus to breathing seems like it would make it easier to stay there and to come back there when the mind wanders. The "Controlled relaxation breathing", if done via diaphragmatic breathing, is one of the very first things I was taught to do in physical therapy back in November. Relaxes the central nervous system, engages the parasympathetic nervous system. Because I have been doing that since November, I tend towards it naturally by now anyway. If my back is sore, my posture doesn't feel as good, and I find myself taking shallower breaths into my diaphragm and that's awkward and I do something different. But by default, that's what I already do during these focused practices. Anyway, we practiced all of these things in class, and I will try them all multiple times, with the possible exception of the mantra. Honestly, I know it says to pick a sound that means nothing, but who here wouldn't be tempted to pick "Ho-Dor" or "You-Guys" in cartman's voice or something like that. Poem Today's poem is Autobiography in Five Short Chapters, by Portia Nelson. I haven't commented on a poem in a long time, its extremely rare that its a form of art/expression that I relate to in any way at all, but I like this one. |
03-24-2015, 11:49 PM | #73 |
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Small Group Discussion
The instructor notes that we are now over halfway through Mindfulness class. He asks us to break down into groups of 4 or 5 with whoever is close by and talk about what we've learned so far, how we've found practicing, anything really. I'm uncomfortable in big groups. I'm capable of being more comfortable in a smaller group. One of the guys in this group is the guy I probably would relate to the most in the class, another of the younger guys here, in IT, when he talks about the stuff he's done it sounds like it comes from a similar mindset as mine, so I'm definitely comfortable here. This gets into the idea of anonymity though, and exactly how far I want to take that. I'm pretty sure I could talk about anything that was said here just fine, none of it felt deeply personal or anything, but that rule of "it would allow that person to identify themselves if they stumbled upon this blog somehow" is one I should probably stick with very carefully. I'd feel weird if I happened upon someone else doing the same thing and they quoted me in a way that made it clear it was me. So instead, I'll say that I enjoyed talking in this small group. People had similar thoughts about what's been going on. Some people had taken this class before, and the idea that you *really* do have to practice these things is key. It seems like it would be easy to just leave all this behind me as an interesting 8 week experiment when its done. I don't want to do that though. Finding the time to do things was common. We talked about when we liked to do various practices, which ones were comfortable and which ones weren't. I spoke up a good bit in this smaller setting, though everything I said really just mirrors things I've mentioned in "review" type posts here. I mentioned that I usually do the sitting meditation at night, with mixed results (sometimes its relaxing, sometimes not), that I like it way better than walking or body scan. That body awareness is a problem for me. I asked a couple questions to the people who has taken the class before about long term changes they saw. Everyone mentioned noticing small ways in which we are beginning to consider things differently as a result of this class. For myself, I think I've mentioned it elsewhere, but I forget. I mentioned that I notice myself thinking about things slightly differently... still with an overly-analytical view, but that part of my analysis is frequently shaped by concepts we learn here. I'm less harsh on myself when things aren't perfect, if I'm not happy with something I'm doing I find myself attempting to gently shift myself away from it (like catching myself doing a nervous tic type behavior), instead of an internal monologue of "What the fuck, just STOP DOING THAT". Mostly, I notice myself being more okay with whatever is happening that I'm analyzing. I'm not really "experiencing my life in the present moment" in a different way. But I will analyze something and say "that's just what my experience was today, its ok", or I'll at least give myself the option to think that instead of to overthink everything into the ground. Its a small difference, and everyone else in the group talked about similar small differences in their own lives, that seem like they could build into something more meaningful if we stick with this stuff. Discussion of Last Week's Practice Unpleasant Events So I didn't write a ton about this last week because it was uncomfortable. We get homework sheets essentially to write a sentence or two about our experiences, and we turn them in and our instructor makes a couple notes on them and gives them back the next week. I noted that it was easier to bring awareness to "bigger" unpleasant thoughts. I decided not to turn in the stuff I wrote about this, just as I chose not to write about any of it in detail here. Why mention that? Because when we started talking about this as a group the first 3 or 4 people who spoke up said "I really couldn't find anything unpleasant to focus on most days." Huh. Really? I had a pretty strong reaction to this, internally. Fuck that. Fuck them and their lives without a single unpleasant thing over a 7 day period. They're probably just repressing all their shit anyway. One person mentions noticing physical reactions to unpleasant things, noticing a specific place where she feels tense and feels stress. She asks if she can use this awareness to stop the negative thing. The instructor mentions that is a much more difficult thing to do. That in the beginning (and this is a "beginner" class, there are other things taught that you can take after this one), we are taught to just become more aware of these things, that awareness and working towards accepting things when possible... not liking, but acknowledging, is frequently enough to lower the stress responses we've learned about, and to prevent stress from getting worse by fighting against things out of our control, or going in circles over things in your head, etc. Additionally, if you are striving to "stop" an unpleasant thought, that just adds an extra layer of stress on top when you "fail". Neutral Events The instructor mentions that for most people most things that happen are simply neutral, neither positive nor negative, and that's fine. We're not going to be asked to observe a ton of neutral things as a specific homework assignment. He does mention a tendency for neutral things to occasionally feel like boring things, turning them into negatives, just something to be aware of. |
03-24-2015, 11:57 PM | #74 |
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Resistance & The Pain Cycle
We talk about the concept of resistance in a general sense, applying it both to emotional and physical discomfort/pain. When we are hurt, it is natural for our bodies to tense up around the pain (literally around physical pain like back pain causing the muscles in the back to tighten up and stay that way, to try to protect the back, or in areas of your body... jaw, chest, stomach, tensing up when feeling an emotional hurt). We want to fight the pain, to make it go away at any cost, to say "why is this happening to me. This isn't fair." -- We are asked to close our eyes and go along with some suggestions from the instructor. Choose a pain you currently have, emotional of physical, doesn't matter. A moderate pain would be best here, not something devastating or excruciating. I choose the physical pain in my left knee. We are asked to focus on the area of pain, in a non-judgemental way. Its there, just acknowledge that its there. We can't (presumably) just make it go away. Notice any specific physical tension around the area of pain (in my case, a tendency to just put my leg in a position where the knee doesn't feel any pressure and just leave it there, unmoving, which tightens things up a bit). Observe and describe to yourself the type of pain you're feeling, all while calmly maintaining your breathing. Now, is there an area of your body that feels good right now, or at least an area that doesn't hurt? I move my attention over to my right knee. That one is fine. Focus on the fact that your pain isn't (presumably for all of us at least) all consuming. So the point here is that by acknowledging that your pain exists -- and no one lives life completely pain free at all times -- and by trying to lower your need/desire to resist and fight against that pain, you can actually notably reduce the level of pain sensation that you feel. When mindfulness was first being researched, when this mindfulness based stress reduction course was developed decades ago, this is one of the first things to be scientifically proven. After taking this course, people with chronic back pain very frequently will report a noteworthy drop in the intensity of their pain. A drop from a 9 to a 6 on a scale of 1 to 10, for example. You can't make your pain go away, but very real changes can be made in this way. **I feel like there are details I'm missing here that I've forgotten as I'm trying to write this up. But we're told this is something we're going to be returning to next week, so its ok. -- I am, of course, very interested in this, as my pain was one of the primary reasons this course was recommended to me. And I do still have my foot and my knee things. In a different universe, one where maybe I did have some physical pelvic floor dysfunction (chronic prostatitis or interstitial cystitis being the *big* ones when I webmd'd myself into some kind of hell looking up all of my symptoms that just got worse and worse over the last few years before I found physical therapy), using mindfulness to manage that pain could have been vital to me. It will still be useful for me for sure, but I'm happy its something I can just explore and learn about instead of feeling like I *have* to be able to get this, or else. I may have felt that way back in December. We specifically get a handout on "The Pain Cycle", if you google that phrase there are tons of different images available, some simple, some complex, some physical only, some leaning *heavily* on the psychological. This one is simple and is half and half. Pain can start from stress, which causes physical tension, or from injury, which causes pain. That tension (over time I assume), can lead to a sensation of pain as well, which leads to negative thoughts about the pain, worry about how much damage has been done, about getting back to normal, etc, which leads to negative emotions like fear and frustration, which leads to more stress, hence a cycle. -- I've lost count of how many times in the last few weeks something I've learned in this mindfulness class has either reinforced something I learned in physical therapy, or has helped to explain something that was happening there. At times during my pelvic floor PT there was a focus on stress and mental health that I often found offputting, but eventually came around on, at least enough to sign up for this class and to take it seriously Also the physical elements of this cycle really make sense too, looking back on how my problems started. I did have underlying physical issues (serious obesity, serious muscle shortness/tightness, completely 100% sedentary for years and years), and once bladder type problems started showing up, it was stressful as hell and I handled it poorly. This cycle makes a freaking ton of sense, put together with other things I've learned and my own experience. Finally, there's a note in the handout that breaking the cycle of pain can begin anywhere in the cycle - hence, I assume, the idea that using mindfulness to reduce the emotional components that come with pain can reduce the physical stress and physical sensations of pain as the cycle moves around. To fully be successful, though, all areas in this cycle must be dealt with. Another concept from PT that came up in a few different ways, the idea that I am working hard on my physical issues, but that to really accomplish the maximum possible, I also need to work on anxiety issues and how I view pain in general. So this is all around fascinating stuff. Last edited by Radii : 03-25-2015 at 10:26 AM. |
03-24-2015, 11:59 PM | #75 |
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Mindful Yoga Part 2
This simply expands on what we learned last week, and I'm not going to go through it in great detail. Last week we learned a few simple things for lower body stretching. The stuff we did this week was almost entirely done standing, and for upper body. Homework Mindfulness Meditation/Mindful Yoga - Spend 20-30 minutes doing these two things, either alternate days, or do both each day, meditate for awhile, and stretch some before or after. Walking Meditation - Do this 5 minutes a day. Breathing Space - Same as the past few weeks, do this 3 times a day. Reaction Awareness - We didn't really talk about this, at least in the same way its listed on the handout. "Note any strong emotional or physical experiences. Bring awareness to moments of reacting in an emotionally charged way. What can you distinguish between mental and physical experiences. Explore options for responding with greater mindfulness and clarity." The way this was discussed in class was "bring awareness to physical or emotional pain once a day. Don't pick something too painful, pick something moderate. Notice how you experience this pain, and we'll talk about it next week." Logistics - Make Up Class and Day of Mindfulness We missed a class due to snow awhile back. Officially, the instructor is modifying things to cover everything in 7 weeks instead of 8. But there is a "bonus session" being offered on one extra Monday night. Content TBD. I bought a yoga mat for the day of mindfulness (and just to have at home, it'll be nicer than stretching on this shitty 25 year old carpet at home). I am slightly less terrified of this event now, we talked about it a little more in class, everything will be guided, there is no "ok go do whatever you want and wander around and find yourself" shit (which I suppose I should have known but it was an unknown exactly how this would be structured. It sounds highly structured which puts me at ease a bit). Its still 6 hours of doing these things that I'm used to doing for 15 min here and there when the mood strikes me. That's going to be... interesting. There is a lot of reading from Week 4 that I haven't talked about yet, and Week 5's reading to do, I've skimmed it. I don't want to fall too far behind on that, so hopefully soon. Last edited by Radii : 03-25-2015 at 10:29 AM. |
03-25-2015, 12:08 AM | #76 |
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Week 5 Tuesday Homework
Sitting Meditation - I did this in a waiting room when I had a good bit of time to kill. There was no one else in the room most of the time, and they play classical music there, no TV, no other huge public distractions. I'd say I spent 15-20 minutes doing this, my distractions and thoughts all came in the form of thinking through the things I wanted to happen at my appointment. Sometimes easy to move back away from those thoughts, sometimes not. Overall, a calming thing to do, those thoughts would have been racing like crazy without this meditation process. I did not do any yoga today. Walking Meditation - I did this for 5 minutes. I haven't done it in awhile, it was awkward and my mind, and vision, was everywhere noting the crap around me. Breathing Space - Did this twice today. I am sticking on the idea that this feels mechanical and that it is the same every time. There's not necessarily anything wrong with something being the same every time, but I have this sense that I decide what its going to be before I do it. Its a bit hard to describe I think? I guess the best example is that during the 3rd step of this, "expanding", where you open your eyes and allow your focus to move slowly away from your breathing, I remember what's around me, so before I look, I already know what I'm looking for to "experience", instead of doing it without an expectation to just see what might happen. I dunno. This feels strange to write about It makes sense in my head. Reaction Awareness - This is the thing where you're supposed to notice an emotional or physical pain and just make note of your reaction to it. I forgot this was part of the homework until I finished writing things up, so I didn't do this today either. Tomorrow! |
03-26-2015, 12:18 PM | #77 |
Head Coach
Join Date: Jul 2001
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Lost internet access last night during the neighborhood commotion mentioned in the sitting meditation section, that's the only reason this is being posted late.
Week 5 Wednesday Homework Well today was certainly an interesting day. Mindful Yoga - I did this for about 25-30 minutes I think, I didn't time it. But I did the full thing, the new upper body stretching that we learned in class this week and the seated/lower body stuff we learned two weeks ago. My main goal for this was to see if it would help loosen up my knee a bit about an hour before going to the gym to see if I could do a bit more there. But I did try to do the vast majority of it mindfully, paying attention to how my body felt during the entire thing. Nothing special to report on that, at least that I can remember. Sitting Meditation - I intended to do this for 15 minutes. I'm playing around with the "in/out" breathing thing (think "in" to yourself when you breath in, think "out" when you breathe out). Hm, a few sirens. Back to my breathing. HOLY SHIT EXPLOSION. Uh. Ok, there's an electrical station a mile or so from here and every so often there will be a transformer explosion. This seemed MUCH louder. Am I in some zen like state where I'm like hyper aware of this? ... Oh, no. That's way too many sirens now for that. Ok, mindfulness isn't supposed to block actual life/death stress responses, lets go make sure this isn't one, just to be safe. I did the meditation for 7 minutes, apparently. A house about 5 houses down from ours that was not occupied (thank god) and being renovated appears to have burned down completely. There was a neighborhood gettogether around 11:30pm to watch. Walking Meditation - Did this for 5 minutes. Do not remember anything significant to note. Breathing Space - Not as interesting as an explosion perhaps, but I had a new experience with this today. Went to Chipotle, the line is out the door. I notice that my mind is racing more than usual, its all over the place. Gonna be in line awhile, lets try this breathing space thing. Inner monologue: Ok, I'm in line at chipotle. My mind is going a mile a minute. I am not here at all right now. Breathe, focus, breathe, focus, move up in line, but keep breathing, focus. Ok, "expand", back to the real world. Notice the rest of myself outside of just breathing, notice the people in front of me, etc. BAM. I've got something, at least this time. My mind isn't racing anymore. I am really focused on a thing going on with work. Its not life or death, its something I can solve, but its something that I'm going to have some anxiety about until I solve it. Huh, this wasn't on my mind at all this morning. I'm completely calm about it. I've got this. Did I just "unlock" some unconscious thing that was making my mind race on me more than usual? Or was this just what was left once I did something, with success, to bring myself away from all these thoughts and back to the present? My mind races all the time. It doesn't bother me in the slightest, unless it starts happening when I *want* to focus. I wasn't distressed or trying to fix anything. I just happened to notice it and decided to do this thing instead of racing around with my thoughts while bored in a line. So I don't know what happened, but something absolutely happened. Mind isn't racing anymore, and now I'm thinking about something that would usually cause me some kind of low-level anxiety, but I'm perfectly, 100% calm about it and its just there and I'll deal with it when I get home. Neat. Completely fascinating. Reaction Awareness - Poor night of sleep for me. My knee has hurt a lot in the mornings the last 3 days in a row. It usually loosens up during the day and bothers me less later on, but not always. This was a particularly poor night, woke up 5 times before giving up and just getting up. The last time I woke up I decided to go through that little exercise we did in class with pain. Try to focus on my knee. I'm in a position that's usually comfortable but I feel a fairly large amount of pressure in my knee. I know when I roll over to get up there's going to be a strong surge of pain. Its ok. Lets just focus on my knee, focus on what I'm feeling and just let it be there for a little while. Ok, now move the focus over to an area where I'm feeling no pain. Ok, now back to that knee. Its ok. Time to get up. I try to accept a mindset of "well, whatever is going to happen is going to happen, i can't control it", instead of bracing myself, wondering what that first step will feel like, because it can be drastically different from day to day. It hurts, about the same as yesterday. Oh well, time to go about my day. Now, that's not really different than most mornings. My mindset about this problem is very good right now. Hurts some days, doesn't hurt others, I'm doing all the right things though, so it'll be ok. I don't think anything changed instantly, just starting with the active idea/practice of lessening my "resistance" to whatever pain is going to be there today. That was a lot of writing for a homework day, damn. But like I said, it was a very intersting day to me. |
03-27-2015, 12:38 PM | #78 |
Head Coach
Join Date: Jul 2001
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Week 5 Thursday Homework
I was saving stretching and the meditating stuff for later in the evening last night, and ended up just not doing it. Oops! Breathing Space - Did this 3x like normal, nothing new and interesting to report today though. Reaction Awareness - Went to the gym last night, we modified everything around my knee to find easier things that I can do (no squats/lunges, etc). Late last night though my knee was *REALLY* hurting. Iced it, then laid down to do this focus thing to "sit with it" for a little while. I'm still not sure I'm "doing it right", they have mentioned that Saturday at this 6 hour thing coming up we will be practicing everything we've learned, so I assume we'll be doing this and I'll get a better feel for it then. I will say that doing something aimed towards "lowering resistance" to the pain, at least in that moment, helped slow me down and kept me from spending any time worrying about whether this was going to mean I wouldn't be sleeping (slept fine last night) or if I need to change something I'm doing (pain levels was back to normal this morning, I no longer feel an immediate need to spend any time worrying about this). |
03-28-2015, 12:01 AM | #79 |
Head Coach
Join Date: Jul 2001
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Week 5 Friday Homework
Sitting Meditation/Mindful Yoga - I got too restless during the meditation and just stopped doing it, about 10 minutes in. The first few minutes I was quite calm and just doing one of the counting breathing things, I'm not quite sure why it went the way it did, my mind kept getting more and more active throughout. Perhaps nervousness about this stuff tomorrow, I'm not sure. Usually if my mind starts moving faster I'm ok with it, and can go back to my breathing well enough, or just let it happen and say to myself "well that's what this experience is this time". Tonight I just really didn't want to do it anymore once that started. I did stretch for a few minutes after to get that in. Walking Meditation - Did this for 5-7 minutes earlier in the evening. I was moving way slower and more deliberately than I ever have doing this. I'm not sure if that was a sign of being calm and peaceful about doing it and just being real methodical, or if its a sign of improved balance from some of these PT exercises (an idea being to move as slow as you can without losing your balance). Other than a general "slowing down" process though this still just feels strange, and still feels strange to describe Breathing Space - 3x. Reaction Awareness - I hope this doesn't turn into me bitching about my knee non stop. That isn't my goal here, but it where we're headed again today. Knee hurt real bad today again, I didn't really do any big focused task today, but I did try to note times where I was a little more frustrated about it than others, carrying in groceries which requires a few stairs each way that was stinging quite badly each time, etc. The location for the Day of Mindfulness is about an hour away, scheduled to go from 9:30-3:30pm. I'll obviously write something about it, though I wouldn't expect much more than highlights or a general flow of the day, I won't be taking my phone in with me or anything to take notes to remind myself of anything. I'm not dreading it, but I'd be lying if I said I was looking forward to it. We shall see. Last edited by Radii : 03-28-2015 at 12:02 AM. |
03-29-2015, 01:36 AM | #80 |
Head Coach
Join Date: Jul 2001
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Saturday, March 28 - Day of Mindfulness
Lets get the most important thing out of the way up front here. If you are in a room with 30 other people, and 28 of you are going to be 100% silent for 6 hours straight, the other two (the instructors) are speaking occasionally and speaking softly/gently when they do, there are simply NO opportunities to sneak out a fart without others noticing. Everyone is going to notice, every time. Most of these activities took about 20 minutes, with a short break in between. If you can hold it in until break time and get into the bathroom, kudos. If you can't, well, return focus to your breathing and hope everyone thinks its the person sitting next to you that did it. A quick note on the formatting here. I'm going though everything here chronologically. Things that I've done before are all underlined. For many of those things I may not have more than a sentence or two to say. We did many sitting meditations, though some of them were presented in a slightly different way, I'll talk about those. There are two sections that were totally new to me. Those sections are bolded. One of them I titled "Random Activities". You'll see why when I get there. There were a couple "key" parts of that section, I'll probably put that thing in its own post, since it was all over the place. Expectations -- I intend to go into this like I did the class, without any pre-conceived notions or expectations. I am curious about some things though. I don't know exactly what's about to happen, but I know there are about 6 hours of guided practice coming up, and I've never done this for more than 30 minutes at a time, and there are times even that is very uncomfortable. When you remove all distractions via meditation or silence or whatever, sometimes you don't really like where your mind lands, if you truly aren't sending it somewhere specific. That thought is uncomfortable thinking about being here with a big crowd. -- I wonder how doing this for 6 hours will effect me. Will I become more peaceful and patient throughout the day? Will I just want it to end, and will I get more agitated and impatient as the day goes on? I don't want to actively do anything to change my experience, but I am genuinely curious about this. -- We're at a campgrounds, in a building that's called a lodge. There is one very large room, with a very small hallway. There are two bathrooms down the hallway, and a small kitchen. Refrigerator, microwave, sink. Introduction I arrive a few minutes before 9:30, its cold, but should warm up some. I wear a short sleeve t-shirt, sweatpants (stretching in jeans sucks), and bring a light jacket and heavy jacket both. Going outside is a possibility for some things, and the temperature of the lodge we're in isn't guaranteed. I bring my yoga mat that I bought last week. Others have brought cushions and other meditation/eastern type things to sit on. I still haven't messed with any of those things because of my knee, and because I like sitting. Many people bring blankets. Apparently some people find they get very cold doing things like meditation or body scans. I have never had this happen and tend to be very warm natured. The instructors explain what's going to happen today. We will be practicing everything we've learned so far. It will all be guided. Most activities will last about 20 minutes. There are two bathrooms, they are labelled men and women, but there are a lot more women than men here, just make them both unisex for today. There are mugs out if anyone wants to make tea at lunchtime. If you brought a cushion there is room up front to sit down on it. There are enough chairs for everyone. Feel free to make a space for yourself with a cushion and a chair and switch back and forth as you find comfortable. I'm sitting in the back row of chairs that are set up, yoga mat behind me. -- With the day starting, everyone is asked to be respectful, and to remain silent until the end of the day. There will be short breaks between activities. Feel free to use the bathrooms then if you need to. Don't interrupt any practice time unless its an emergency. We are asked to turn off all electronic devices. I always leave my phone in the car for class, I did the same here. The instructors mention that part of the day of mindfulness is that we have a day today with no expectations, no distractions. No projects to work on, no lists of things to accomplish. We can spend this entire time focused entirely on the present. Calls, texts, and all other normal distractions that pull us away from present awareness can wait. -- We open with a quick "Breathing space" like exercise to get ready for other things. Sit up straight, breathe for a few moments, expand awareness out to the rest of the group. -- A poem is read. I've long forgotten which one. Sitting Meditation We begin with sitting meditation. The instructor says a little at the start about finding posture, focusing on breath, and then becomes silent himself. At some point he speaks up again to say "if you've become distracted, I invite you to return to your breathing at this time". I don't remember anything remarkable happening here. I play around with counting while breathing. My distractions are minor ones. It is early, I typically wake up at 10am many days (working from home + night owl). Even though I've been up for about 3 hours now, its still not 10am yet, I've done nothing to "warm up" today. I was kind of hoping we would start the day with stretching. I find it difficult to hold my posture, I stretch my neck from side to side, adjust my legs, adjust my overall posture a few times. These are my main distractions during this task. Walking Meditation With little to no break at all, the other instructor takes over (they take turns it appears) and tells us we will be doing walking meditation next for 20 minutes. We can go outside if we'd like, but its very cold (by North Carolina standards) still. Also I've noticed other people around, this is a big campground type area, there are lots of other buildings, and something seems to be going on at the dining hall right next to this building. I still feel very strange about this practice, I'll stay inside where no one will see me but the other people doing the same thing. The instructor reminds us about focuses me may want here. To be aware of your mechanics while walking, what it feels like when your feet hit the ground, how your steps feel, how your body moves to stay in alignment, how it feels to turn around. Even if outside, the idea is to walk in a small space, about 10 feet. With that, we start, no more guiding is done by the instructors, and we do this for a time (I assume 20 minutes b/c they said so, I have no idea). Full silence for this from everyone as well. I spend more time than I care to admit focused on my knee during this task. I think I pushed myself too hard at the gym Thursday. Today it hurts to walk, its not usually like that. I am limping noticeably on every step. This bothers me, in part because its abnormal for me even given my current issues, but also because I am embarrassed to have this problem around all of these people 20-30 years older than me. I should be able to handle this, etc. |
03-29-2015, 01:42 AM | #81 |
Head Coach
Join Date: Jul 2001
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Sitting Meditation
It takes a few minutes for the folks who were outside to return. A couple people are talking as they come in. This is the last time I hear anyone at all but the instructors speak for the rest of the day until we're told to. I think this was another "standard" sitting meditation (later ones have slightly different points of focus, I'll get to that). I do not remember anything remarkable about this practice. There is some guiding from the instructor, but not a lot. Mindful Yoga/Stretching We move things around a bit so everyone can lay out their yoga mats. We are guided through the exact same stretching routine that we did in class, the full thing. We begin standing and do all of the upper body stretches for the neck/shoulders/back, then lay down and do the lower body stretches and the cat/cow thing. About half the time when I do this at home I'm doing it "only" to stretch and have the TV on or something. Here I obviously aim for the full mindful approach, looking to see how I feel doing all of this as much as I'm looking to loosen up. I don't remember noting much here that felt important, I don't remember feeling hugely distracted either. Body Scan We stay where we are for a body scan next. The instructor walks us through this entire thing as well. Despite my knee still hurting badly (I swear I dont want to keep focusing on this shit, so I'll just say it never got any better, never loosened up any, but it isn't relevant to anything past this so I'm not going to bring it up again), I don't avoid the call to focus on my knee. I am able to just fine. This is a noteworthy change. I'm not bothered by this focus like i was when we did this in the first week. My focus remains strong throughout the look over the lower body. Something changes when we get to the upper body. I wonder about this, it doesn't *seem* to be an attention span thing, look at my attention span in other activities. But that damn upper body, my mind just goes off on its own and I'm gone. It happens every time I do this via CD, and it happens here exactly the same, except there is no annoying parts that will have me lurch back into the audio. I've mentioned a few times that sometimes in these kinds of things, the mind lands on something uncomfortable, or emotional. That happens here. I land on something I need to do but have been putting off. Can't say more than that, sorry. I find myself saying that more than I intended to at the start of this little project, I hope its ok I'll say I've got some stuff I need to do to get past a roadblock, but I'm putting it off. I start thinking about this and its uncomfortable, but I let that thought process go on (instead of pulling myself back to the body scan, or pushing away stuff I just don't want to come up). That's more uncomfortable. A big part of mindfulness for me seems to be about learning the ability to have uncomfortable feelings and thoughts and allowing them to exist instead of ignoring them. At some point I do decide I've had enough thinking on things, and try to go back to listening to the body scan. Mindful Eating/Lunch/Break At this point I have no concept of time. We got here at 9:30. Its lunchtime. We're given some time to get our lunches ready and to find a space to eat, but don't start eating yet. We are going to begin our meals with mindful eating, but we don't have to eat everything that way, just the first few bites. We will take an hour for lunch. Lunch will end at 1:10. So apparently its about noon. The hallways and the kitchen are very small. Many people need to use the bathroom. Many people need to use the microwave. It feels like it takes a very, very long time for everyone to get ready for lunch. I brought 2 baked chicken thighs and a serving of BBQ flavored pork rinds. I want to microwave the chicken. The person in front of me wants to heat up some water. She has trouble figuring out how to use the microwave. She shrugs, I lean over, press the right button to get it started. She gives me a thumbs up. I nod back at her. So finally we are all ready to eat. We are walked through the same mindful eating process we went through back in the first week. This still just simply doesn't interest me. After the day is over others spoke of mindful eating, both in positive and negative ways. One person said she only ate half her lunch and realized she was satisfied. Hell, I wasn't hungry at all, I just decided to eat what I brought. I had afternoon appointments literally every day last week. I tend to like to skip breakfast on those days and just eat a larger meal later. Yesterday I didn't eat anything until 7pm. Almost 24 hours fasting (8 sleeping of course). Neat. I still like fasting/intermittent fasting on low carb. So yeah, my relationship with food is right where I want it right now. I'm in control. But I'm in control with numbers, not mindfulness. This is not something I want to fuck with. I go through the motions with mindful eating. Baked chicken is pretty bland. Its even more bland when eaten mindfully. BBQ Pork Rinds are fun to eat mindfully though. Crunch crunch. After Lunch Break I have no idea what time I finish eating. But we appear to take the full hour, even though everyone finished eating. Now, I'm sure some (many?) people went to their cars and checked their phones or made a call or whatever, but inside the lodge, everyone remained quiet. Some people wandered a bit, read stuff on the walls. But a lot of people folded up coats or used cushions as pillows and laid down on their yoga mats. I folded up my coat and laid on it. We basically had naptime, like we were in kindergarten. It was funny to notice, but it felt really calm and peaceful. At one point while I was eating I thought about doing my physical therapy exercises in the free time. I decided against it, even if it feels a bit silly, I keep buying into things here. In this case the idea presented in the introduction that there is nothing to accomplish today other than to be present. We can worry about getting back to all the real world distractions after we leave here. So I don't do my exercises. I decide that I can just lay there and relax, or wander, or whatever. It probably doesn't matter, but it feels like staying within the spirit of the whole thing. It does seem noteworthy though. This pattern of "well, this seems weird, but ok, sure, I'll just go along with it, and maybe I'll learn something." That single thing probably says a lot about what I'm getting out of this class, though I can't really pinpoint what it means exactly. They ring the bell to signal the end of lunchtime. The lady next to me seems like she's asleep. I don't really want to have to go poke her to wake her up. Ok, whew, she was just moving real slow. She's up. Sitting Meditation w/ Body Awareness Focus We do another sitting meditation, this time with a specific focus on body awareness. But its body awareness specifically around the breath, so the constant focus on the breath remains. How this works is that we start like normal, posture, focus on breathing, etc. Now, turn your attention to your face. Notice how it feels to breathe through your nose. Notice how it feels to breathe out through your nose. Feel the air coming in, feel the air hitting your upper lip as you breathe out. That sort of thing. Repeat moving to the throat, notice how it feels as the air enters your body. Down to the chest. Notice any other changes in your body as you breathe. I notice when I take a deep breath in my upper back tightens/contracts very slightly. There is some silence during this, but for the most part the instructor is guiding us here. Maybe for the first 1/2 to 2/3 of the time we are guided, with some silence at the end. |
03-29-2015, 01:47 AM | #82 |
Head Coach
Join Date: Jul 2001
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Random? Activities
Where I found points at least sort of new or interesting I'll try to "title" them in an underlined topic. Instructor's words in quotes throughout. We re-arrange the room to clear out floor space in the back half of the room. All ~30 of us move back there. The instructor has us all standing clumped fairly close together. He says, "ok, you guys don't know what we're doing, but that's ok. I'll guide you. You may begin to walk randomly" No more instruction than that. So we start walking around this rather small area, dodging each other. The instructor is describing walking meditation sensations, and asking us to notice what we're doing. More than noticing walking I notice maneuvering through tight spaces. Some people are practically walking in place, some in one direction, some another. I specifically remember a comment about "note how it feels to walk without going anywhere at all" /shrug. "Now stop." We all stand in place again, more body awareness type stuff, how do you feel differently standing still than walking,etc. "You may walk again." -- Now that we know what's up, patterns emerge, which fascinates me way more than the mindfulness part of this. We're not all walking the same way, but everyone is now walking in a circle, either counterclockwise or clockwise, its easier to avoid people, everyone conforms. I'm not sure that's at all the point, but I absolutely notice the pattern above all else. I like noticing things like this in crowds, at the mall, etc. "Walk faster" -- Now people begin to bump into each other, or have to stutter step to avoid doing so. There really isn't that much room. I forget anything the instructor said here. "Now stop." "Take one step forward." - We all do. Thinking about the past, I guess? "Can you undo that step? No, that step is in the past. You could take a step backwards and be where you were, but that doesn't undo the past. You cannot change that step you took, just as you cannot change any actions you took a year ago, or 5 years ago. Think about how you perceive time, especially in the past", there is some more said here, and I may not have this precisely correct, despite putting it in quotes. Its a simple thing, you can't change the past. Its a topic in mindfulness with some frequency. Mindfulness is about the present moment. There is a time to think about the past and to learn from it, but its easy to get caught up living in the past and wanting to change outcomes, wishing things were a way other than the way they are. Those thoughts get us nowhere. Simple concept, something we've talked about in a more straightforward manner, but in the mix of these random instructions it provides a "huh, neat" reaction from many people (not obviously at the time since we are still asked to be silent, but it came up a couple times in the discussion at the end of the day and it seemed many people had a similar reaction). ... "You may walk" Contact "Now stop. Pair up with someone, anyone" - people quickly pair up with whomever is closest to them. I'm paired up with another guy, a little shorter than me. Not in my class, I've never seen him before (not that it matters). "Decide who goes first" - That's kind of interesting when you don't have any idea what you're about to do, and when none of you have spoken for upwards of 5 hours now. We both shrug, and I raise my hand and mouth "I will." Other guy nods. Neither of us spoke. "Whoever goes first, put your hand on your partner's shoulder." - So I do. Its slightly odd to be touching a stranger standing in complete silence like this, looking at each other wondering what's next seems even weirder, so I just close my eyes and listen. We stay in that position/posture for a minute or two (I have no idea actually how long), the instructor says to the person being touched to be aware of what it feels like to be touched. "Do you feel anything in your neck when someone touches your shoulder like this? Do you feel a difference in your arm, or your chest, or even your legs maybe? Its ok if you don't, but just notice" Similar instructions to the person doing the touching. I don't remember what he said or what I felt. This is awkward. Lets stop doing this now. Those are my thoughts. We switch places, so I remove my hand from dude's shoulder, he puts his hand on my shoulder. Instructor does the same kind of walk through. I notice my shoulder moving slightly. I notice an instinct to pull away. I don't want to be touched. I am not comfortable. At all. I do feel a difference in my neck, not in my chest, but in my legs. I think from my very strong instinct to pull away from this contact. We're done. Whew. -- I didn't think this would come up here, and I'm not sure if there was supposed to be any more to this than body awareness stuff. But I have a strong aversion to casual contact. I have a strong general preference not to be touched. If I have voluntarily touched you in any way beyond a handshake, or allowed you to do the same to me, that certainly has far more meaning behind it than it would for most people. "You may walk" ... so we do. Trust Exercise, and more Contact "Now stop, pair up with someone again" - Same as last time, whoever you are generally facing. I pair up with a woman, probably 10-12 inches shorter than me. "Face the same direction, with one standing behind the other." We both start to turn around, she ends up behind me. "The person in the back, take a small step to your right. Now, put your left hand on your partner's right shoulder" -- She does this. I still don't want to be touched, but there it is. "The person in the back, close your eyes, keep them closed. The person in front, you may walk, and lead" I start walking. I feel her hand pull at my shoulder immediately. Right, I'm basically a foot taller than this person. I need to drastically adjust how I walk. I take very small steps for me. I crouch slightly, probably just a couple inches, but hopefully it helps. I quickly develop the obvious goal, "well I'm not going to run her into anyone". I start strategically planning my pace and my route and turning radius to try to get into the most open spaces with no one around. When I turn I try to turn my shoulder in a slightly more exaggerated way so she will know what's coming up. She turns too far, ok, I need to turn more naturally. I try to walk around the outside edge of the circle that develops to avoid running her into anyone. While this is happening, the instructor is talking to the people doing the following. What does it feel like to trust this person in front of you, to let go of control, and some other things. The instructor then addresses the people leading. "How does it feel to lead, to have this person's trust given to you" ... I'm not letting this person bump into anyone, and listening to the instructor just makes that harder, so I stop doing that. "now stop, and switch places" - I think I did a good job? I don't think she bumped into anyone, but I don't know for sure. Its a tight space with a lot of people. We switch places. I close my eyes and follow, feeling where her shoulder is pulling and trying to follow. Within 3 steps, I have bumped into someone. Oh. I wonder how many times I ran her into someone after all. It really is a very small space. The instructor walks through the same things he did when the roles were reversed. Again the height difference matters. If I take normal steps when I feel her move ahead I step too far ahead and step on her heels. I have to try to figure out her pace and stride by feel and match it. What I'm sure is the most important note here is that I absolutely cannot resist opening my eyes for a split second numerous times. I've completely lost my bearings, I guess this means I don't trust this person? This came up at the end of the day as well, others mentioned that they would look, or how hard it was not to, even though the only consequence is the potential to bump into someone else. When this activity is over, we take our seats. |
03-29-2015, 01:52 AM | #83 |
Head Coach
Join Date: Jul 2001
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Loving Kindness Meditation
Up front, lets just add this to the list of things that sounds strange to explain, but that I do the way they suggest, and am surprised about how I feel about it. This is something we've never done in class, nor even talked about yet. The title sounds wonky to me, ick. But I don't get to choose that. I don't remember a lot of the introduction but my good friend Google is here to help me out. This is a Buddhist practice, perhaps contemporarily called "compassion meditation". Ok, I remember the instructor talking about compassion for other human beings, that mindfulness helps remove barriers and makes us more compassionate by default, but that this practice can help move the process along with intentional compassion. So basically you just repeat affirmative and kind statements internally about various types of people, we've never done this so we're walked through it easily and slowly. There are apparently a number of different statements you can use. Here's what we did Yourself Start by being kind to yourself. The instructor introduces us to the phrase and has us say it to ourselves, she repeats it a few times. I guess that the act of saying something kind to yourself is supposed to help you actually do these things. "May I hold my struggles with compassion" (or something like that) The first one seems important, and is something mindfulness has actually helped me with. I'm hard on myself. Its a thing for me, always comparing my actions to perfect. In many ways I like this about myself. If I get a 95 on a test, hey, that's great, but could I do something better to get a 100? I think I learned, or at least, perfected this mindset playing poker. Results are irrelevant. Make the right decision as often as possible and results will come. I apply this everywhere. To work problems, to my gaming, poker translates to league of legends so well. Hell I did this in physical therapy and frustrated the hell out of my therapist a couple times. I'd be generally very happy with how I was doing, but I would put my focus on how to do things even better, when all I really needed to do to succeed was to keep chugging along. I still think that's ok much of the time, but it leaves me not celebrating doing *very well*, but not quite perfect. And if I fail at something badly, there's a ton of questioning how I could have done better. I do have to say this is one of the things I have noticed honestly changing with this course. Spots where I might beat myself up before I tend to accept what happened instead. Not always, but at times, and it feels noticeable different. That doesn't mean I've changed completely. I still want perfect. I still want to always look at everything and find what I can improve upon. There's just not quite as negative a tone to it. So yeah, this statement actually elicits all of this out of me and its quite the response. "May I be well" "May I be happy" "May I be safe" No response to any of these. "May I be content" I... dunno. Do I want to be content? I'm working extremely hard on improving myself. I have a long way to go. I spent 15 years taking awful care of myself. I've lost a ton of weight, but I'm not quite done. I've addressed lots of major health problems, but I'm not quite done. I've introduced some new health problems that need focus. I have other things "on the list" to work on. I'm sure there is a difference between contentment and complacency, but this is my response to hearing this statement and to saying it to myself. Someone you care about This was not stated all that clearly, someone that you care about was what I got from it. You're supposed to pick an individual and think of them. Then, the instructor walks us through the same statements above (except for the struggles, that's for yourself only): "May they be well" "May they be happy" "May they be safe" "May they be content" Well, of course I would want someone I care about to have all these things. But I don't actively think about it like this. It elicits a really strong reaction out of me to actively focus on someone I care about and wish these things for them. I'm not comfortable writing about it here in any sort of detail. I will say that I can tell this elicits an extremely strong reaction from many people. There are 25-28 of us there. I'd say from this point to the end of the exercise I could pick out a number of different people (by sound, eyes closed), who were crying, sniffling, etc. I wonder who they chose, and under what circumstances they were moved to that emotion. Someone neutral that you only vaguely know Same statements, this time a neutral party who is only peripherally in your life, that you wouldn't normally think about at all. I chose our mailman. No reaction from this. The collective "everyone" Same statements, be compassionate and think about wishing everyone happiness, safety, and contentment. -- There is an added step here, to choose someone who you actively dislike, and to express the exact same compassion for that person. The instructor says that since this is the first time any of us have heard of this, we'll stick to the easy stuff. I need to think about someone I hate to have some compassion for before class on Monday -- Since this was just introduced quickly and we just went through it, slowly, as with everything in mindfulness, but still, we basically breezed through this without a ton of talk about why, I don't have a whole lot else to say here. But that second one was a doozy for a lot of people. |
03-29-2015, 01:55 AM | #84 |
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Walking Meditation
We have another round of Walking Meditation, this time with a twist from the previous activity. While walking, whenever the mood strikes you, notice someone near you and silently wish them well. You can have compassion for any living thing, the trees outside, animals, anything. I stayed inside for this again. Lets just say that there is a plant on the mantle in my little 10 foot walking spot that has to be the most appreciated plant in the universe by now. Sitting Meditation w/ Auditory Focus "This will be a quicker practice, I'm sure many of you are quite tired and holding a good posture is getting tough." Yeah, I've noticed this. So this meditation has the added focus of bringing awareness to sounds around you. The instructor makes a clear distinction, "Now, I don't want you to actively go seeking out sounds. Just notice them when they come to you" In practice I must say that's a hard distinction to get, I get it in theory though. The heater is running. Its pretty hard not to fixate on that. There is someone behind me who cannot sit still. Non stop shuffling noises. Mindful Speaking/Listening We are, one last time, asked to pair up. There is a lady sitting on the same row as me, I move over to sit next to her. We are going to break our silence after ~5 1/2 hours here. The phrase "mindful speaking" is given, but there's another phrase along with it, I have forgotten it. The practice here is to talk about your experience from the day for 2-3 minutes each. One person will go first. The person talking should be mindful of their speaking, of their pace. To be deliberate. To take a breath before beginning a new thought, and to see if something new comes up when being mindful. The person listening is to listen. Do not respond. The little agreements and "yes" and "no"'s that happen during conversations should not be there. The person listening should listen in mindful silence, and *really* listen, without the distraction of needing to "participate" in what the other is saying. I go first. I talk about the trust exercise, how much of a goal it was for me to not run my person into someone, how I felt like I did that very well, but then when following, I bumped into someone immediately. Its not that easy, and I now assume I did run my person into someone at least once, and just couldn't tell. There's still time left apparently after I complete my thoughts on that. I mention something about noticing others crying during the loving kindness activities. Time's up. It is WEIRD to just talk at/to someone without any response from them. Now the other person is given a short period of time to respond. Now we switch. She gets to talk about her experience for a few minutes, with me just listening. Even though I think of myself as someone who is straightforward, who wants to cut through the bullshit of small talk, who gets to the point, I find it very weird and difficult to avoid participating in this standard practice of interjecting into someone else's story/thoughts to show that I'm listening. I find myself nodding in an exaggerated way or smiling bigger than I normally would at something funny to give some kind of signal. Like at other times, I don't think anything this person said to me was deeply personal, but I guess i can't know that for sure, and that identifying factor thing still matters, so I won't talk about anything she said. Sharing as a group, finish That was our last activity. We all crowd up close to the front together to talk about our experiences. Mostly it was very affirming. Other people were struck by the same things. The trust exercise was a big topic of conversation. The brief comment about "taking your step back" and the fact that one step is in the past in the same way as shit that happened a year ago struck some people as pretty profound. Some differing opinions on the silence. Easy for some, impossible and offputting for others. With that, we are done with the Day of Mindfulness. I will probably write a small followup post tomorrow with any thoughts i have about the experience as a whole. Too late tonight for that |
03-29-2015, 03:02 PM | #85 |
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Day of Mindfulness Review/Thoughts
So I think I talked about every individual experience enough in yesterday's writeup. For a lot of them I didn't say much, there really wasn't anything to say. With the sitting meditations, I will point out that I don't use the CD that we have at home. I just sit there quietly. When we first learned that practice in class, they didn't specifically tell us "there's a CD track for this if you want to use it", and I didn't think to look, so I just learned how to do it without. Once I realized there was a guided audio for it, I was already happy with what I was doing. So having the instructors guide us through this did feel a little different. Not "easier" necessarily, but there's an external focal point whenever they speak, which makes it difficult for my mind to race off very far on its own. On the newer things that we did, I assume we'll learn more about them in class, and I'll write more about them at that time. On the structure of everything, and on my curiosities/expectations going in: -- I really do wish we had done yoga first, a little light physical movement for a "warmup" would have helped me a lot for sure. I think I get why we didn't. Yoga required rearranging the room compared to nearly every other activity. The way we did it allowed for us to easily move through the first 60-90 minutes without having to rearrange a bunch of chairs and make room for yoga mats, etc. For that first hour people were still settling in seemingly, some people were still wanting to speak between practices, for example. -- I noted before things started that I was curious how I would react to 6 hours straight of doing stuff, wondering if there would be a trend of becoming more calm/peaceful as it went on, or if I'd be agitated and more easily distracted. In reality, none of that stuff happened. There was no trend. Each practice/activity was its own unique thing with its own beginning and end. I never took thoughts or feelings from one into the next. Even a couple spots where I had stronger, unexpected responses (the loving kindness meditation, the second half of the body scan, the random thing where there was some contact I'd prefer not to have), as soon as they were over, I was ready to see what the next thing would be. -- I also had some curiosity about how my attention would be held here. Would I start thinking about what I was going to do after this? Would I start wondering "when will we be done?". Nope. Neither happened a single time. The only concept of time I had there would be mentions that most practices would last about 20 minutes, and a mention of when we'd resume after lunch. But they could have told me after the fact that lunch was only 30 minutes, or that it was two hours, and I would have believed it. Sometimes in these practices time flies, sometimes it slows to a crawl, and sometimes I can't tell which is happening. There was a patience about the whole atmosphere, so even when shifting between practices it didn't really dawn on me to wonder what time it was, how long was left, etc. The best example was before we ate lunch. 30 people, one very, very small kitchen, maybe 3 people could be in there at a time. One microwave with lots of people wanting to heat up stuff. I have no idea how long it took everyone to get their food ready. It definitely took at least 10 minutes (just based on me noting microwave usage while I was in the kitchen myself). It might have taken 25 minutes. It didn't seem like anyone felt rushed or worried about it for a second. Of course I can't say for sure what others were feeling, but I definitely was not worried about it at all, even though I noted that there was a really long delay for this. The whole day was just very calm and un-rushed in this manner, very serene. Favorite Experiences Honestly, the whole after lunch scene was my favorite part of the day. No one had anything to do, no idea how long we had before things started back up, and a bunch of people just laid down like it was kindergarten naptime. I cannot imagine this, on any scale, in other settings. Not the naptime part, mind you, I'm not lamenting that construction workers don't lay out blankets at their job sites and nap after they eat. :P But the general relaxed atmosphere, despite incomplete information. I know that if I finish a task before the allotted time is up, my normal thought process goes something like this: "I'm bored. Why isn't everyone else done yet? Oh hey everyone else is done, come on, come on, lets move on to the next thing. I'm bored. I don't have anything to do. How much longer do I have to sit here? Maybe if I go ask how much longer they'll figure out that we are ready to move on." There's none of that here. I'll just relax, close my eyes, or look around, or whatever, when its time for the next thing they'll let us know. Its cool. Its such a striking difference. As far as actual guided things that we did, the whole "Random Activity" section was my favorite... even though my least favorite experience was a small part of it. The whole structure behind what we were doing there, we're all bunched up close together, we have no idea what we're about to be asked to do, we may repeat something over and over or we may do a bunch of seemingly random things, and it doesn't really matter, its cool. Again I can compare this to places where I don't know what's about to happen. I don't like not knowing, its stressful. What if they ask me to do something I don't like? And hell, here they did ask me to do something I don't like. And I didn't like it while I was doing it. But the second that part was over, it was over, and it was all ok again, back to just being curious about what we'll be asked to try next, without any anxiety behind it. Least Favorite Experiences -- Really just the touching thing. And only the first touching thing, because the task was just to touch someone, or be touched, and to focus on it mindfully. The second touching thing which involved one person leading and another following, that was fine since there was a task to focus on. Quick Instructor Note So there were two instructors here, the one for our class and the one that was our substitute a few weeks ago, she teaches the same thing in a different session. I like my instructor, he's always felt down to earth, he explains things extremely well. I'm sure its natural to want to favor my guy over the other lady, but that's not going to be my complaint here. So, I've seen the other instructor twice now. Once when she taught us for a week, and once here at the Day of Mindfulness. And she was fine for the whole day, no issues with any activities she led or anything. But I've seen her twice now, and twice I've been referred to her personal website, to a separate class she teaches on her own, and to the opportunity to purchase a book that she has written. Huge turnoff. She doesn't do that every week in class, does she? Surely not. I'm certainly ok with a little self promotion, but its just felt very offputting. Would I do this again? Actually a relevant question because apparently its accepted that once you've taken this class you can typically attend any Day of Mindfulness anywhere. If you're not a current student (who paid for the class), they will ask for a donation to help the program. That was mentioned at the start here but there was no pushing about it or anything, and there was at least one person who was there just to do it again. They made it sound like this is a standard at any of these programs across the country, since they are all supposed to be pretty much the same. So if I moved back to Atlanta and wanted to see what this was like at Emory (assuming they had a program too, I haven't actually checked), I could get in touch with them and see when one was happening. So would I do it again? Maybe, yeah. It was an interesting experience, an overall positive I think. Will this day have an impact on my life? I dunno about that. But look at how many times in this post I've mentioned how calm/peaceful/serene everything felt. I like that. So yeah, if I keep practicing these things, and find myself further implementing mindfulness into my daily life, and I get an e-mail about the next day of mindfulness at UNC, I could see myself doing it again. Why not? |
03-30-2015, 12:17 AM | #86 |
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Join Date: Jul 2001
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Week 5 Sunday Homework
Sitting Meditation - Did this for 15 minutes. I did it relatively soon after watching the Walking Dead finale, which I guess is some kind of challenge mode since that got me pretty amped up. I found minor-moderate distractions doing this tonight, lots of small stuff like thinking about things I need to do for work tomorrow, etc. I notice myself somewhat randomly switching between the different techniques we learned in class, the counting, etc. Like I'll start counting to 10, "fail" a couple times and have to start over, and just abandon that idea and switch to something else. I think the idea is to pick one way and play with it for a little while, to practice it. I did not do any mindful yoga today. Walking Meditation - I did this for 5 minutes. I noticed myself having some balance issues at a slow pace today, I havent had an issue with that in awhile. Breathing Space - 3x. I did nothing with this "reaction awareness" task today. Its one of those things where you have to think about it when something is happening. So if I forget to do so during the day then that's that, I can't put it off til the last minute and do something right before I go to bed. I'm hoping we talk a lot more about the pain stuff and reaction awareness in class tomorrow. That's it for this week, Week 6 class tomorrow night! Only 2 more "official" classes left, plus the "bonus class" to make up for the snow day. |
03-30-2015, 11:26 PM | #87 |
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Writeup of class tomorrow, i didn't really feel like working on it tonight. I feel like this will be a short writeup compared to most classes, but I keep saying that for things and writing 4 posts worth of stuff anyway. I am really ambivalent at best about the info from this class, very blah. I'll try to work on it tomorrow though!
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03-31-2015, 11:38 PM | #88 |
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Week 6 Class - March 30th, 2015
There is once again a ton of reading this week, and not much of it is related to the class tonight, I was hoping to use it to fill in some stuff here. This class felt extremely light to me. Maybe its because the content just didn't resonate with me in any real way. Office Stretching We learn a series of stretches we can do at our desks in the office. Some odd facial things (rubbing the rim of the eye sockets? Is that a thing?), but mostly neck/shoulder/wrists, a couple bend to the side type things to stretch out, a little twist thing for the back, etc. Basic things, some of which I already do a couple times a day since I am at a desk most of the day, even though I am standing some. Poem The Guest House by Rumi Meh? Perspective/Perception/Mood The instructor asks us to reflect on a sentence... and its not written down anywhere and I cannot remember the whole thing exactly. It is something saying that more than half of our perception of an event is shaped by our own perspective (as opposed to some objective "what actually happened"). I really don't even remember the key phrases from the actual quote, but that's where the conversation headed. UNC is a liberal arts school, there is a discussion on reality and philosophy and Plato (I think) driven by the other students, not the instructor, that makes this computer science guy want to take a nap. But there's something here, at least. Five people witness something happen and all five might have a different perspective on it, might even completely disagree on what actually happened. A charge is called in a UNC/Duke game, UNC fans and Duke fans see completely different things happen. Dear god just read the Ferguson thread on this board, etc. Our own lifetime of experiences drive the way we see things that happen in the world. This leads into a little discussion on moods. Huge good moods or bad moods of all kinds of varieties are fairly easy to spot. But there are lots of moods that are very subtle and we really don't notice if we're in a very slightly positive or negative mood, but these moods, even if unconscious, have a pretty big impact on how we may perceive and react to an event/conversation/whatever. There's nothing specific here, its all abstract. The point made at the end is that understanding that our perception of things that happen can frequently be driven so much by our mood and our experiences, and that others around us may perceive things totally differently, is important. Mindfulness practices can help us pull away some of the top layer bullshit and allow us to be in touch with what our mood actually is when its subtle, and that being more aware of these things can help us in interactions with others. There's nothing wrong with any of this. It all makes sense. But its all really abstract, and some of the side conversation that happened here was just not for me, so my perception of this is that we wasted a lot of time here to make a small, seemingly obvious point. Others probably perceived this totally differently and enjoyed the discussion greatly |
03-31-2015, 11:41 PM | #89 |
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Insight Dialogue
I mentioned in the day of mindfulness writeup that we did something around "mindful speaking" and "mindful listening", there was another phrase for it that I couldn't remember. That phrase was "insight dialogue". So, we start by talking about the fact that we all interact with other people all the time in order to meet our needs in life, for safety, happiness, food, etc. Anything you might describe as a need in your life. Lots of interactions with other people involve two people with different needs. There are three separate ways to handle these interactions (really more than 3, but 3 main categories): Passive - I will give up on the idea of my need being met to allow you to get yours met. Aggressive - I am going to see my needs are met, at the expensive of yours. Assertive - So the definitions here get a little funky. Assertive in this context is really the midpoint between passive and aggressive. Not what I would normally think when I think "assertive". But in this context, it is about that middle ground, with two main sub-categories: Compromise, where both sides can express their needs, and each side is willing to give up something to get some of their needs met. Collaboration, where both sides look to work together to see if there is a way that everyone's needs can be met. We talk about a few different things here: -- Often when people have different needs, the best they can do is jump straight to compromise, which leads to everyone not getting something. Don't forget about collaboration, look for unique solutions to make eveyrone happy. -- Most people tend towards one side of things. Most people are naturally aggressive or naturally passive. Changing this can be extremely difficult. This is the huge bulk of the conversation. But its all just the intro to the actual mindfulness stuff: Insight Dialogue is a way of being involved in conversations with others mindfully. It follows a similar pattern as the Breathing Space activity. Pause, Relax, Open. Before engaging in a conversation, especially one that may be heated, or involve conflict, take a short pause instead of saying the first thing in your head. Relax. Bring mindfulness briefly to the body, allow yourself to relax (if you tense your shoulders in a situation where conflict is involved, look for that, etc). Open: Extend awareness back out from yourself. All of this is spins a mindfulness perspective on "think before you speak." Ok. There's some usefulness here, again. Think before you speak is important. A small conflict can be approached with aggression or with assertiveness, and the entire interaction may change depending on how you handle it. Using concepts we've learned in this class, the idea of taking a breath, of slowing down a bit, being in the present moment, you can better handle conversations at work, in relationships, etc. Again, all of this makes sense. But unlike some other discussions we've had (probably the ones with more research and science backing them), when we talk for a half hour about concepts like these that feel pretty simple, and that end with less concrete "here is how you implement this directly", when the discussion is more abstract, it just resonates a bit less with me. Another issue I have with this is personal, and I think I want to bring it up in class next week. If you tend towards aggression, it feels very obvious to me how you use Insight Dialogue to slow yourself down just a bit and drop back to assertive, to listen to the other person, and to not run over them. That's not me. I'm passive. I'm the one getting out of the way. I can see, in theory, how slowing down and looking for collaboration can try to "amp me up" from passively giving up what I want to avoid conflict, to trying to work together a bit more. But its less straight forward, and there are other issues that *feel* like they are outside the scope of mindfulness in pushing from passive to assertive in many situations. Also, we really had this whole discussion with very few concrete examples. So at this point we've been talking for an hour or more over these last two subjects and really its not just landing for me tonight. -- The last thing I'll say here is that this strikes me as similar to my comments about mindful eating. I find nothing wrong with the practice itself, but I frequently accomplish these things via another method already. In a conflict situation, I'm very measured when I talk. In any important conversation, I'm very measured. I think about what I say. I don't rush. So I will work on applying these things and see how it feels, but I'm not someone who lets something slip out and has to backtrack or apologize very often, etc. Sitting Practice with focus on Thoughts The last couple weeks (including the day of mindfulness) we've been learning lots of little things we can do differently with meditation. Here we aim to keep a mild focus on our breath, but the main focus is on our thoughts. We're not supposed to grab at them, or force them. The description is really very similar to the "default" meditation that we learned where the focus is entirely on your breath. Thoughts will come, imagine them as clouds, you can observe them but can't stop them from passing by. Just allow them to pass by without judgement. Its the exact same metaphor. The difference is that with the default practice the idea is to observe the thought when it becomes distracting, let it go, and return to breath. Here, the idea is to stay with the thoughts that pass by the entire time, if it becomes too much, ok, go back to the breath to reset. Subtle difference. Obviously, when we do this in class, I find myself more devoid of thoughts than I've ever been. My mind races all the time and sometimes meditation slows it down in a nice way. But you know what slows it down even more, stops it in its tracks? The instruction to pay calm attention to thoughts the whole time. Its like having a car that makes a noise 95% of the time you drive, but it stops right when you take it to a mechanic. Try to focus on breathing? THOUGHTS EVERYWHERE. Try to focus on thoughts, and they all go and hide. I found this pretty amusing. Homework Sitting Meditation, Walking Meditation, Mindful Yoga - Practice for 30 minutes each day, experiment with combinations of all three. Breathing Space - Same instructions as always. Informal Practices - Introduce very slight pauses in your conversations to practice insight dialogue. See how it feels. See if you notice anything more than you would have in a more free flowing, reactionary conversation. Thoughts and Emotions - We didn't talk about this at all. Notice your thoughts in relationship to your emotions. When you sense an emotion, be with it for a moment and look for the thoughts that come before or after. Ask yourself, "Is this thought true? Is it unequivocally true? How does believing this thought make me feel? If I did not think this thought, how would I feel?" Ok, we *very* briefly talked about this. Those questions are part of a side conversation about "Thoughts as thoughts" and perception. The idea that many of your thoughts are unconscious and may or may not represent any sort of actual truth. But we didn't go into much detail here at all, and it wasn't mentioned when the instructor talked about homework. I have a couple goals with homework this week: 1) Actually mix up the three practices mentioned. Don't do sitting meditation every day because I like it best. Try, at least occasionally, to do this in the middle of the day, or in the morning, just to see what's different. I tend to save this stuff for the end of the day. 2) Actively look for situations to try out breathing space. Not just when I think "oh man I need a break", but look for situations where I have a couple minutes to kill and can do it. Breathing Space still feels like the thing with the most real world implications as far as practices go. There was the idea presented early on that this is something that can take a minute or two early on, but can take seconds with lots and lots of practice. I want to practice this, lots. Next week is "officially" our last class. There is a bonus week, but we are told that everything in the regular 8 week course is going to be covered by the end of next week. I have a couple questions that I want to make sure get addressed: 1) With the Insight dialogue discussion this week, any advice for the passive people? Back to my comments above about how its easier to see this stuff as a way to slow down from aggression to something better, but harder to see practical uses to be more assertive. 2) There are two things in our reading this week on pain. I want to make sure that gets discussed in more detail. I intend to ask some questions about it to get it discussed if I have to. That's it for this week! Nothing really wrong with this class, it just didn't land the way almost everything else has. |
03-31-2015, 11:42 PM | #90 |
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Week 6 Tuesday Homework
Sitting Meditation - I did this for a half hour. Its all I did today in this regard. Breathing Space - 3x. I didn't go out of my way to look for new situations to do this in. That idea came to me while writing later in the evening The other two things, insight dialgoue and thoguhts/emotions seem like they are going to be very hard to remember to do in the moment. I will work on that tomorrow. |
04-02-2015, 12:36 AM | #91 |
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Week 6 Wednesday Homework
Walking Meditation - Did this for 10 minutes tonight, just to mix it up. Sitting Meditation - Back to the damn knee, I guess pain management is what got me to sign up for this course, even though it was in a different area. The knee is getting steadily worse despite the ortho physical therapy. Frustrating PT visit today, unsure if I'm having expected ups and downs or if something more is happening here, its tough to be patient and not worry about things like that. I re-read all of the handout information we've gotten from class that talked about strategies and practices to deal with pain management. I worked on one of those strategies for about 20 minutes today and intend to work on that every day for the forseeable future, and will work in 10 minutes of "other stuff" to just try to keep doing all of the other things I've learned. This goes back to class a couple weeks ago where there was a focus on "resisting" pain. Pain will happen, but your experience with it can change depending on how you react to it, but it takes practice and won't happen overnight. Breathing Space - 3x, looking for "new situations" to do this in, once at physical therapy in between exercises as I was feeling my mindset about things turning very negative. No miracles or anything with that, but that's ok, there's never anything wrong with just taking a breath and taking a brief break. Insight Dialogue - I tried to do this once during a conversation, I dunno, feels weird. But again, like the breathing space, the worst outcome is that nothing happens, you take a breath, slow down briefly, and keep going where you were already headed. No big deal. |
04-03-2015, 12:49 PM | #92 |
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Week 6 Thursday Homework
Walking Meditation - Did this for 10 minutes again today. Sitting Meditation - I spent some time on youtube looking for some kind of "guided" mindfulness meditation aimed towards lowering resistance to pain. Tried one, relaxing, helped me wind down before bed, so that's nice. Breathing Space - 3x, continuing to look for spots throughout the day to do this, notice myself on 1000% autopilot making breakfast, mind off in other places the entire time, a good spot to do this little practice. I didn't do anything with the insight dialogue thing or the thoughts/emotions thing. Both seem extremely difficult for me to think about doing in the moment. |
04-05-2015, 12:18 AM | #93 |
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I didn't do crap Friday.
Week 6 Saturday Homework I split things up throughout the day today. I don't really have any comments on anything I did (we've reached a point, at the end here, where there is just rarely a whole lot to say about the homework), I did 10 minutes of walking meditation, 10 minutes later in the day where I was focusing on pain in a way outlined in our handouts, and then 10 minutes at the end of the day doing a "normal" mindfulness meditation with a focus on breath. |
04-05-2015, 11:52 PM | #94 |
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Week 6 Sunday Homework
Similar report as yesterday, I did most of the things on the homework sheet, but I dont find much of it worth writing about in the sense that its nothing new, same stuff just being practiced more, which is a good thing, but not worth daily updates or anything I did the survey for this week today as well. Tomorrow is the "last" regular class, we got an e-mail today about it, saying that it will be a big wrapup and contain a lot of discussion on how to "carry forward your mindfulness practice" once the class is over. There will be one more class after this but its labelled a "bonus" class since it wasn't planned initially and not everyone can attend, so they didn't want it to be the "wrap-up" class. As for the writeup, this will be the end of the daily updates. There are a few weeks worth of reading that I never wrote anything about, and I have full intent to do that at some point. I will write up each of the two remaining classes, and will have some final thoughts on everything at the end as well. |
04-07-2015, 01:03 AM | #95 |
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Join Date: Jul 2001
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Good class tonight, writeup may not go up til Wednesday though, I have 4 appointments in the next two days (that tooth? Need a root canal! That knee? PT not working, going back to orthopedist a month early to get an MRI and re-evaluate what we're doing, both of those decisions were made today, awesome huh!?). So anyway, a good class tonight was nice and relaxing and informative after dealing with that stuff earlier today. But anyway, I have notes taken and some good stuff to write I think, but it may be a couple days.
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04-08-2015, 12:55 AM | #96 |
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Join Date: Jul 2001
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Week 7 Class - April 6th, 2015
Sitting Meditation - Complete Awareness By the time I got home I couldn't remember the exact phrase used here, I *think* complete awareness was it, maybe "total awareness". You get the idea though. This begins with our standard focus on the breath. With other meditations the focus may remain on the breath the entire time (with thoughts or anything else that comes up being a 'distraction' to notice and return to the breath). Alternatively, the focus may be on something specific, thoughts, sounds, body sensations, etc. The things I've done that have a focus on resistance to pain are essentially "sitting meditation with a focus on painful sensations". -- So anyway, this is a guided meditation where we begin with a focus on the breath, but we allow ourselves to go to anything that comes up in any fashion and just observe it. If that becomes too much of a distraction, return to the breath. We do this for awhile, and I assume the instructor realizes that there is a lot more "activity" going on with something more open-ended like this, and he breaks in to remind us to return to the breath more frequently than normal. This is a "tough" one for me. This seems to encourage that racing mind, running off after anything shiny in my entire field of awareness. Thoughts are always difficult, sounds less so, body sensations that are NOT pain usually pretty easy to notice and move on, but with "permission" to land on any of these things, oh man, its a little bit much. Poem The Summer Day by Mary Oliver Discussion Topics - Class/Practice Experience We have a group discussion about our experiences, either in the class, or with our practices at home. I'd say over half of the class shared something, and everyone shared something different. I didn't speak up here. I, of course, have tons of thoughts about my experiences here, on lots of small changes that I do see in myself that I attribute at least in part to this class that add up to something noteworthy. But I do have one week left since I'll be attending the bonus class next week, so I'll save that for the very end. The varying experiences are nice to hear. Some I relate to, some I don't. -- After so many people share some experiences, the instructor smiles and says "there is an unbelievable amount of knowledge in this room. I really don't need to say anything else at all. I don't need to be here, something one of you is struggling with, someone else is finding a connection with. You could all teach each other at this point." Its a nice sentiment. Its also a nice confirmation of the idea of just rolling with it. Lots of practices we've done here really didn't resonate with me. Some things felt really weird and a little offputting. But those things may have been the most important things for others here. We all describe different benefits to being here, different things we see that we can use to improve our lives going forward. -- This also really helps to close out, and validate in a way, many of the apprehensions that I had going into the class. I said at the very start that if I stumbled on to a website about this on my own, I'd never consider it. The list of things that are said to improve in people are HUGE. It feels like a scam advertisement. Like a promise to cure everything. But that's not it. In the class you quickly learn that the opposite is true. NOTHING is promised. Just put in the time and something will happen. Don't strive for something specific, just try lots of different things, see what resonates, see what happens. Be open minded. And this discussion really shows all of those things to be completely true. Everyone here got something out of this class within a few weeks. Everyone seems to have ideas about how they can further their practice in their own way to get a lot more out of it going forward. Its offputting to see the list of benefits on the website. Its offputting to be told that nothing can be promised once you start here. Its incredibly counter-intuitive to be told that the way to get the most out of the class is to not strive for anything, and just see what happens. But at the end, it makes complete and total sense. If I was hyperfocused on pain management, since that is why I came here, if I tuned out the things that felt weird, how much would I have missed? |
04-08-2015, 01:00 AM | #97 |
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Join Date: Jul 2001
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Further Practice
We get a handout on something called "The six sources of influence", if you google that you will get a lot of charts talking about addiction. The same categories exist in our handout but its been modified to allow us to talk about using mindfulness going forward, so its a little lighter than the things you might find in a google search. I think the aim here is to just think about different things that you can do to build a habit out of this. -- Personal Motivation - Think about the benefits you've seen from practice so far, and things that seem open to be accomplished with continued practice. -- Personal Ability - We've learned all we need to to find success with this. -- Social Motivation - Who are your allies and cheerleaders? A lot of people have involved their families in this stuff. For me its more private. Minus the part where I have discussed 90% of what I've done, thought, and felt on the internet in a public forum, of course -- Social Ability - Teamwork is a big part of this. The idea that if you sit in a group of people and meditate together, even if completely silent, not guided, that you will 100% do it for longer without noticing discomfort compared to doing it by yourself. -- Structural/Environmental Motivation - Looking for rewards, or accountabilities to continue to practice. The instructor gives a personal example of a routine he has in the morning to shower, stretch, and meditate. The structure works well, it feels like a nice morning routine. Also a reward in a sense, no breakfast until doing those things. We talk some about creating a structure for that sort of thing to encourage further practice. -- Structural/Environmental Ability - Again using a personal example, the instructor talks about how he has an area set up for meditation. Cushion and whatever other stuff he likes to sit on to be comfortable are set up all the time. Its easy to put things in a closet and forget they exist. If they are out and ready to use, one less barrier to building a habit. -- We discuss a lot of things for further practice that are included in our handouts. A lot of books for further learning, different perspectives. There is a list of meditation centers in the area that practice together regularly. Some are based on specific eastern customs, so there may be specific ways of sitting that are taught and encouraged (enforced?), or some chanting, or one that was mentioned that is based on Japanese culture that has some rituals, nothing too crazy we are told, and all of these groups are open and accepting and teach these things regularly. There are some advanced/specialized classes that are taught at UNC and Duke. Some of them are one day classes with a heavy focus on one topic or one practice. Some are 2-4 weeks that go into a topic in greater detail. We all have each other's e-mails, if we've made friends in class, organize something. The Day of Mindfulness is mentioned as something we can attend in the future, or we could check out the schedule at Duke and attend one of theirs if we want. I'll go ahead and mention for those curious that I actually do have more than a passing interest in many of these things, at least at the moment. Its extremely possible that social anxiety gets the best of me, but checking out one of these meditation centers actually seems appealing (I say, with more than a little surprise at myself ). I looked at the current list of advanced classes and didn't see anything very appealing, but I'm interested in keeping up with what's available. At this point I feel its a near certainty that I'll attend another Day of Mindfulness down the road. That was a truly unique and calming and peaceful experience, and I would really like to do that again. I'm curious to see what different things I might get out of a day like that if I actually do continue practicing and mediate daily (or near daily) over the next few months. |
04-08-2015, 01:06 AM | #98 |
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Join Date: Jul 2001
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Pairs - 1 on 1 Discussion
We are split up into pairs, as always by the instructor just going around the room. We're asked to work on insight dialogue, Pause - Breathe - Open, or, think before you speak (this remains the thing that resonates with me less than anything else in the entire class). We're given two questions to answer, and to talk for a couple minutes. As always, I won't say anything about what the other person told me. What were your expectations coming into class I intentionally avoided placing expectations on anything at the start. I limited my research (something I almost NEVER do) on the class, I trusted the recommendations and advice of my physical therapist and psychologist both and dove into this. I took this class as a way to try to find a pain management strategy, and to deal with day to day anxiety in my life. In the end, by the way, I'm extremely glad I approached it this way. If I knew before signing up how much sharing was encouraged (even though none was ever required outside of introductions), I may have let social anxiety win and not signed up. If I had read ahead too far and started reading about walking meditation, I might have decided this was just too weird and I'm just going to feel awkward the entire time, might as well save my money. Why did you stay? I never actually considered not staying. I think it took a few weeks for me to say "Ok, I'm all in here". If you go back to the earlier weeks of this, I'm pretty sure I wrote a big section entitled "The physiology of stress." THAT was the moment that I was all in. Until then I was doing the things, and it was fine, but it involved a lot of blind faith in a lot of things. -- We talk in our pairs about these two questions for a few minutes. The instructor rings the bell to bring discussion to a close. My partner says "but wait! I wanted to ask you about the stuff you said." I share the same thought, I was really intrigued by some of the stuff she said. That seems to happen a lot in these little groups. I'm sure its intentional. Another round of questions: What sacrifices have you made to come here Very little for me. Money, honestly. I work part time from home. Others here have huge time management concerns. I do not. When I signed up for this class though, money was a concern. I've spent a LOT of money on things recommended by physical therapy, plus all the appointments, all the driving, etc etc. I'm not really one who dwells on that sort of thing, and obviously in hindsight it was all worth it. But there was a point in the physical therapy process where I did stop and think "ok, the results haven't come yet, but I'm told to be patient. But dear lord this is getting EXPENSIVE". I'm glad I stayed patient, and didn't push away the idea of taking this class as a result. What obstacles have you run into in your practice Finding enough time again isn't a problem for me. But on occasion, making time is. Sometimes I save everything til the end of the day, play one extra game of League of Legends, or decide I really want to watch Better Call Saul before I go to bed, and just don't do this stuff. That doesn't happen too often for me, but its basically my obstacle. I am NOT a morning person. I am not someone who is going to put together a detailed, consistent morning routine involving meditation. In my current environment, I can actually dedicate time in the middle of the work day to meditate if I want. Or during the "break" between work and play. Slightly less interesting questions, since they feel less open ended, and at least for me, teach me less about myself (and about the person I'm talking to). Bell rings, next thing. |
04-08-2015, 01:08 AM | #99 |
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Join Date: Jul 2001
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Write a Letter
So here's one of those things that come up in class with some regularity that sounds strange, feels strange to describe, feels strange to do, but given the setting and unusual level of open-mindedness that seems to have come with this class, I go ahead and do it without reservation, without making fun of the task or whatever. -- Think about where you are in your life right now. Think about what you've learned in this mindfulness class. Write a letter to 3 months in the future you. Say whatever you want, but be loving and gentle with yourself. As always, a reasonably open ended task, might mean different things to different people. For myself, I think about my desire to keep up with this, but living in the real world knowing that I might not necessarily do so without class every week. Daily meditation, trying to actively find ways to have moments of mindfulness in the real world, that all sounds great, but how easy will it be to get caught up in the normal thoughts that go through each day and to just stop doing all of these things? So I write myself a letter congratulating myself on my weight loss, my physical therapy success, on learning so many new things in this class on mindfulness. I remind myself of my goals, my desire to continue some of these practices daily, to actively look for situations to apply the things I've learned. I write a little something about a myriad of other goals I have going forward that really have only opened up to me with weight loss and a (slow, very slow) increase in self confidence. I tell myself that if I'm still working on improving myself, if I'm still doing all these things, congrats, great job. But if I have let things slip, if I'm not meditating, if my weight loss (which has been stalled for months now) is still stalled or has reversed even in the slightest, not to worry about it, things happen, but "now" (aka 3 months from now) is a really good time to dedictate myself to getting back on track. -- Here is an envelope. Put the letter in it, write your address on it. Give it to the instructor. In 3-4 months you'll have forgotten that you did this most likely. Wont it be interesting to actually receive this letter in the mail. Yup, he's gonna save them and mail them to us. Huh. Ok. -- I put my PO Box on the envelope. Not really interested in someone else in the house getting this and asking why I got a letter that I clearly addressed to myself in my own handwriting. |
04-08-2015, 01:12 AM | #100 |
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Join Date: Jul 2001
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Questions
Pain Resistance/Management I asked the first question! I referenced the discussion on resistance that we had a few weeks ago, and the exercise the instructor walked us through where we would focus on a moderate (ie not too intense) pain, then after a time moving over to an area where there is less pain. I asked two questions: 1) Can you expand on day to day practice to work towards lowering resistance to pain, what things you may to do try to go about this? -- The primary response here talked about a slow buildup during formal practice, such as sitting meditation. While meditating, allow yourself to briefly, just briefly, focus on your pain, with all of the pillars of mindfulness in play (non-striving, non-judgement, accepting, letting go). Go back to your breathing. Do this a few times. Over time, build up to being able to move your focus to your pain for a little longer. Move back to your breath as needed if the pain is ever too much. -- Another example was given that was new to me and that I don't really quite understand, to give your pain a "shape" and to find the "borders" of the pain, when you are experiencing it. I think this has something to do with making yourself a "neutral observer" to your pain. I did a little googling on this and it looks like something I'll need to play with on my own and just try to be open minded about. -- The instructor emphasized that this is one of the most difficult things to do in general. That it can take time, and that you absolutely must be patient with yourself while working on this skill. He said that he was lucky that he started learning these things at a younger age before he knew about "real pain", and that its always easier to work on something in advance to have it available when you need it. The idea of learning this skill and working on it in the face of existing, significant pain is daunting. Be patient and it can happen. 2) There is nothing guided on the CD that we have that talks about pain management at all, do you have anything you'd recommend (while I enjoy many meditation practices that we've learned without any sort of guided audio, this is one area where i would *really* like to have something to assist)? -- He mentioned a name of a woman who has done a lot of work with mindfulness and pain, but wasn't 100% certain of it, and promised to look it up and send it out to everyone. I will ask about this next week if we don't hear anything during the week. Decision Making A question was asked about using mindfulness with decision making. -- The first and most important thing to note here is that with a large number of big and small decisions, we naturally make the decision unconsciously in an instant and then spend the rest of what we think is the "decision making process" looking for reasons to justify what we've already decided. I can certainly recognize when i've done this before. -- Despite the adage of "go with your gut", the instructor mentions studies (I'm trusting him here, no pointers to them or anything) that show that your gut on decisions is really only right 50% of the time. That it can be trained but that this as a learned skill caps out around making the "right" decision 65% of the time. Again, I can't cite anything here, so feel free to be skeptical about this information. -- The use of mindfulness here is in the ability to pause, to slow things down, and to recognize that this is a thing that happens. Mindfulness in many cases simply offers a choice to view a situation in a new way. So the end advice here feels pretty straightforward. Simply recognize this idea when it comes to big decisions. DONT go with your gut necessarily, just because its the first reaction you had. Instead, recognize this as an unconscious reaction that may or may not be best, set it aside and truly weigh pros and cons without this initial judgement in the way. Apps/Assistance -- There's a question about various apps for smartphones that are out there to encourage mindfulness. I'm still living in the 20th century when it comes to cell phone technology, so I have no idea what's out there. The question is about whether its ok/recommended to use these things. I do, however, search for things on youtube out of curiosity, looking on occasion to see what kind of guided meditations are out there. So I have a bit of an interest in this question anyway. The instructor doesn't know of any specifics about what's out there either. He says that in general these shouldn't be things we need, we really should have the confidence that we have truly learned everything we need in this class to continue on our own. But, if an app, or a guided meditation helps build a habit for you, that's great. But that these aren't necessarily things that we would want to become reliant on long term. |
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